How to be a good ARCHER2 citizen
Overview
Teaching: 20 min
Exercises: 10 minQuestions
How can I be a responsible user?
How can I protect my data?
Objectives
Learn how to be a considerate shared system citizen.
Understand how to protect your critical data.
What can I do on the login nodes? What shouldn’t I do?
The login node is often very busy managing lots of users logged in, creating and editing files and compiling software. It does not have any extra space to run computational work and you will get poor performance if you try to use it for computational work.
Do not run jobs on the login node (though quick tests are generally fine). A “quick test” is generally anything that uses less than 5 minutes of time. If you use too much resource then other users on the login node may start to be affected - their login sessions will start to run slowly and may even freeze or hang.
Login nodes are a shared resource
Remember, the login node is shared with all other users and your actions could cause issues for other people. Think carefully about the potential implications of issuing commands that may use large amounts of resource.
You can always use the command ps ux
to list the processes you are running on a login
node and the amount of CPU and memory they are using. The kill
command can be used along
with the PID to terminate any processes that are using large amounts of resource.
Login Node Etiquette
Which of these commands would probably be okay to run on the login node?
- python physics_sim.py
- make
- create_directories.sh
- molecular_dynamics_2
- tar -xzf R-3.3.0.tar.gz
Solution
- Likely not OK - the name of the python program indicates it may run a resource intensive simulation.
- OK - the login nodes can be used for building software unless the compiles take a very long time.
- OK - A shell script used to manage data will usually be fine to run on the login nodes.
- Likely not OK - the name of the program implies that it may run a resource intensive simulation.
- OK - Expanding small data archives would usually be fine on the login nodes. Extracting very large data archives may be better suited to running on a data analysis node.
If you experience performance issues with a login node you should report it to the ARCHER2 Service Desk for them to investigate.
You should not use ARCHER2 login nodes to login to other, external services. Outgoing SSH connections will be killed.
Do not share your login credentials
You should not share your login details (account name, passwords or SSH keys) with anyone else. If we detect evidence of account sharing of this form we will require you to reset your access credentials.
Accessing another ARCHER2 user account from your account is also not allowed (as this would allow you to potentially capture the credentials for the other account). If we detect this behaviour we will require both people involved to reset their access credentials.
Test before scaling
Remember that you are charged for usage on ARCHER2. A simple mistake in a job script can end up costing a large amount of your resource budget. Imagine a job script with a mistake that makes it sit doing nothing for 24 hours on 1000 cores or one where you have requested 2000 cores by mistake and only use 100 of them. This problem can be compounded if you write scripts that automate job submission (for example, when running the same calculation or analysis over lots of different input). When this happens it hurts both you (as you waste lots of charged resource) and other users (who are blocked from accessing the idle compute nodes).
Also, if ARCHER2 is very busy you may wait in the queue for your job to fail within 10 seconds of starting due to a trivial typo in the job script. This is extremely frustrating! You can use the ARCHER2 test queues to run short correctness tests on your job scripts before submitting the full calculation.
Test job submission scripts that use large amounts of resource
Before submitting a large run of jobs, submit one as a test first to make sure everything works as expected.
Before submitting a very large or very long job submit a short truncated test to ensure that the job starts as expected.
Have a backup plan
Although the ARCHER2 /home file systems are backed up, the /work file systems are not, and /home is only backed up for disaster recovery purposes (i.e. for restoring the whole file system if lost rather than an individual file or directory you have deleted by mistake). Your data on ARCHER2 is primarily your responsibility and you should ensure you have secure copies of data that are critical to your work.
Version control systems (such as Git) often have free, cloud-based offerings (e.g. Github, Gitlab) that are generally used for storing source code. Even if you are not writing your own programs, these can be very useful for storing job scripts, analysis scripts and small input files.
For larger amounts of data, you should make sure you have a robust system in place for taking
copies of critical data off ARCHER2 wherever possible to backed-up storage. Tools such
as rsync
can be very useful for this.
Your access to ARCHER2 will generally be time-limited so you should ensure you have a plan for transferring your data off the system before your access finishes. The time required to transfer large amounts of data should not be underestimated and you should ensure you have planned for this early enough (ideally, before you even start using the system for your research).
As already mentioned, the ARCHER2 User and Best Practice Guide provides a lot of useful information on managing and transferring your data. See:
- https://docs.archer2.ac.uk/user-guide/data.html
Your data is your responsibility
Make sure you understand what the backup policy is on ARCHER2 and what implications this has for your work if you lose your data on the system. Plan your backups of critical data and how you will transfer data off the system throughout the project.
Transferring data
As mentioned above, many users run into the challenge of transferring large amounts of data off HPC systems at some point (this is more often in transferring data off-of than on-to systems, but the advice below applies in either case). Data transfer speed may be limited by many different factors so the best data transfer mechanism to use depends on the type of data being transferred and where the data is going. Some of the key issues to be aware of are:
- Disk speed - The ARCHER2 /work file systems are highly parallel, consisting of a very large number of high performance disk drives. This allows them to support a very high data bandwidth. Unless the remote system has a similar parallel file system you may find your transfer speed limited by disk performance at that end.
- Meta-data performance - Meta-data operations such as opening and closing files or listing the owner or size of a file are much less parallel than read/write operations. If your data consists of a very large number of small files you may find your transfer speed is limited by meta-data operations. Meta-data operations performed by other users on ARCHER2 can also interact strongly with your work so reducing the number of such operations you use (by combining multiple files into a single file) may reduce variability in your transfer rates and increase transfer speeds.
- Network speed - Data transfer performance can be limited by network speed. More importantly, it is limited by the slowest section of the network between source and destination. If you are transferring to your laptop/workstation, this is likely to be its connection (either via LAN or wifi).
- Firewall speed - Most modern networks are protected by some form of firewall that filters out malicious traffic. This filtering has some overhead and can result in a reduction in data transfer performance. The needs of a general purpose network that hosts email/web-servers and desktop machines are quite different from a research network that needs to support high volume data transfers. If you are trying to transfer data to or from a host on a general purpose network you may find the firewall for that network will limit the transfer rate you can achieve.
As mentioned above and earlier in this lesson, if you have related data that consists of a large number of small files it
is strongly recommended to pack the files into a larger archive file for long term storage and
transfer. A single large file makes more efficient use of the file system and is easier to move,
copy and transfer because significantly fewer meta-data operations are required. Archive files can
be created using tools like tar
and zip
.
Consider the best way to transfer data
If you are transferring large amounts of data you will need to think about what may affect your transfer performance. It is always useful to run some tests that you can use to extrapolate how long it will take to transfer your data.
If you have many files, it is best to combine them into an archive file before you transfer them using a tool such as
tar
.
Key Points
Be careful how you use the login node.
Your data on the system is your responsibility.
Again, don’t run stuff on the login node.
Don’t be a bad person and run stuff on the login node.