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A job monitoring daemon for independent use by both regular users and admins of SLURM-managed HPC clusters to collect resource utilization data of jobs, run analyses, and generate actionable reports.

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Turing HPC Cluster Optimization Project

Job Monitoring Daemon (Watcher)

This daemon is a complete data pipeline for independent use by both regular users and administrators of the HPC cluster to collect resource utilization data of jobs, perform analyses and generate reports that can be received through email or checked on-demand through a website using provided web server. This tool is designed for SLURM and tested using version 21.08. To ease in quick start, SLURM batch submission template and systemd service file templates are provided for users to start the daemon with job submission script, and for administrator to start the dameon in a dedicated node, respectively. Check out slides for an introduction of its purpose, functionality and design!

Building

After cloning the repo, please cd into repo directory and do these in preparation of compiling:

  • Edit meson.build to select GPU measurement source
  • Change directory into watcher and run cp src/analyze_mail_config.c{.in,}, then edit src/analyze_mail_config.c to customize email content and recipients.
  • Edit these files in watcher/include to set running parameters:
    • common.h
      • SLURM_TRACK_STEPS_REMOVED: follow the comment to specify how to be compatible with this change
      • DEFAULT_DB_PATH: Default path to install the database
      • SLURMDB_RECONNECT_*: reconnection limits
    • worker.h
      • PRODUCTION_FREQ: whether this is a test run or production run
      • ANALYZE_PERIOD_LENGTH: time to wait before changing to new period
      • ACCOUNTING_RPC_INTERVAL: time between each import from SLRUM accounting database
      • SCRAPE_INTERVAL: time to wait between each scraping
      • TOTAL_SCRAPE_TIME_PER_NODE: length of time of each scraper run
      • SCRAPE_CONCURRENT_NODES: number of nodes to request allocation at once. Note that it will at most request allocating double of this number.
      • ALLOCATION_TIMEOUT: time to wait before deciding current allocation request as failed.
    • If web server is needed, webserver/server.go:
      • userAuthResultField: refer to web server configuration

In project root, run meson setup build to set up a building directory. If missing dependency is prompted, please use build_*_pkg_config.sh in the directory to build their package configs. When using NVML, the path to CUDA toolkit need to be added to PKG_CONFIG_PATH prior to running the building script, as in

export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/cuda/toolkit/version/targets/x86_64-linux/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH

After meson have successfully set up the building directory, run ninja to build binaries.

Usage

The daemon can be used in multiple ways, following template scripts provided in various directories in watcher/:

  • By regular users, attaching to job submission: Port your submission script onto the template provided at scripts/user_submission/submit.sh following instructions in the file and configure watch.sh in the same directory. Submit submit.sh with sbatch.
  • By administrators, but still usable by regular users, to sample the cluster with a long SLURM job: modify the script templates in scripts/slurm_scraping_jobs and run run.sh with bash.
  • By administrators, requires root privilege and preferably on a separate node: create dedicated directory for the tool and copy build/watcher/{turingwatch,webserver/turingreport} into the directory. Within the directory, run systemd/gen_env.sh, modify copies of systemd service file templates in systemd/ following instructions in the file and copy them into /etc/systemd/system. Reload service files with running systemctl daemon-reload and use systemctl start turingwatch.{server,distributor}.service to start watcher server or distributor daemons, respectively.

After the daemon has been running for a period of time, usually 2 or 3 times of ACCOUNTING_RPC_INTERVAL, result tars will appear in analysis_result directory, from which one can:

  • Visit reporting website if the provided webserver is running
  • Run the result postprocessing pipeline script with templates in scripts/scheduled_worker in the directory containing analysis_results/, or schedule the execution of these scripts with SLURM by using sbatch -b or with systemd by enabling the timer service using systemctl enable --now turingwatch.scheduled_worker.timer, after modifying systemd/turingwatch.scheduled_worker.{timer,service} and copying to /etc/systemd/system.
  • Directly untar the tarball and manually send email using mail -t <<< $(cat username.mail.header username.mail)

Example Web Server Configuration

Put files in watcher/webserver/static in a document root directory and configure Apache HTTP Server as follows:

<VirtualHost *:443>
	# ...
	SSLEngine on
	SSLCertificateKeyFile "..."
	SSLCertificateFile "..."

	# Reverse proxy into the application is necessary
	ProxyPass /api http://localhost:8080/api
	ProxyPassReverse /api http://localhost:8080/api

	# Azure Active Directory
	OIDCRedirectURI /auth/callback
	OIDCProviderMetadataURL https://login.microsoftonline.com/tenantid/v2.0/.well-known/openid-configuration
	OIDCScope "openid profile"
        OIDCProviderAuthRequestMethod POST
        OIDCClientID ...
	OIDCClientSecret ...
	OIDCCookie auth_session
        OIDCStateMaxNumberOfCookies 7 true
        OIDCRemoteUserClaim upn
        OIDCPassClaimsAs both
        OIDCAuthNHeader X-AuthUser
	OIDCSessionInactivityTimeout 28700 # 8 hours
	<Location />
                SSLRequireSSL
                SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
                AllowOverride AuthConfig Limit
                AuthType openid-connect
                Require valid-user
                Order allow,deny
                Allow from all
        </Location>
</VirtualHost>

After configuring systemd service scripts as previously mentioned, run systemctl start turingwatch.webserver.service.

Optimization layer (Intercepter)

The dynamic libraries are built along with watcher in intercepter/ and are intended to be used together with LD_PRELOAD. Currently a malloc/free replacement that holds off large chunk of memory from freeing and reuse them before going through actual glibc implementation is implemented lock-free, but have not been throughfully tested yet, due to lack of samples. This layer can also be extended for more infrastructure-specific optimizations.

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A job monitoring daemon for independent use by both regular users and admins of SLURM-managed HPC clusters to collect resource utilization data of jobs, run analyses, and generate actionable reports.

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