JULEA is a flexible storage framework that allows offering arbitrary client interfaces to applications. To be able to rapidly prototype new approaches, it offers object and key-value backends that can either be client-side or server-side; backends for popular storage technologies such as POSIX, LevelDB and MongoDB have already been implemented.
Additionally, JULEA allows dynamically adapting the I/O operations' semantics and can thus be adjusted to different use-cases. It runs completely in user space, which eases development and debugging. Its goal is to provide a solid foundation for storage research and teaching.
For more information, please refer to the documentation.
To use JULEA, first clone the Git repository and enter the directory.
$ git clone https://github.com/wr-hamburg/julea.git
$ cd julea
JULEA has two mandatory dependencies (GLib and libbson) and several optional ones that enable additional functionality.
The dependencies can either be installed using your operating system's package manager or with JULEA's install-dependencies
script that installs them into the dependencies
subdirectory using Spack.
By default, the script will install a useful subset of dependencies;
if you want to install all of them, call it with the full
argument.
$ ./scripts/install-dependencies.sh
After the dependencies have been installed, JULEA has to be configured and compiled using Waf;
the different configuration and build options can be shown with ./waf --help
.
The waf.sh
script is a wrapper around Waf that makes sure that the dependencies installed in the previous step are found.
$ ./waf.sh configure --debug --sanitize
$ ./waf.sh build
To allow JULEA's binaries and dependencies to be found, the environment has to be loaded.
$ . ./scripts/environment.sh
Finally, a JULEA configuration has to be created.
$ julea-config --user \
--object-servers="$(hostname)" --kv-servers="$(hostname)" --db-servers="$(hostname)" \
--object-backend=posix --object-component=server --object-path=/tmp/julea/posix \
--kv-backend=lmdb --kv-component=server --kv-path=/tmp/julea/lmdb \
--db-backend=sqlite --db-component=server --db-path=/tmp/julea/sqlite
You can check whether JULEA works by executing the integrated test suite.
$ ./scripts/test.sh
To get an idea about how to use JULEA from your own application, check out the example
directory.
$ ./waf.sh install
$ cd example
$ make run
If you want to cite JULEA, please use the following paper:
- JULEA: A Flexible Storage Framework for HPC (Michael Kuhn), In High Performance Computing, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (10524), (Editors: Julian Kunkel, Rio Yokota, Michela Taufer, John Shalf), Springer International Publishing, ISC High Performance 2017, Frankfurt, Germany, ISBN: 978-3-319-67629-6, 2017-11