Deploy Procedure in Kadeploy 3 and OAR

From Supercomputación y Cálculo Científico UIS
Revision as of 16:06, 11 October 2014 by Sgelvez (talk | contribs)
NOTE: There are two kinds of environments, private and public. Private environments are only usable for the user that created them. Public environments are available for all users but they can only be created by root. It's important to note that difference and check whether an enviroment should be public or private when creating new ones. Files for public environments should be created in public directories, even if those aren't available via permissions to all users. This is a style norm. It's important to note that the user that performs the operations related to deployments affects the


Deploying a base image

It's necessary to check the exact name of the environment to deploy. The command kaenv3 -l allows to see all the environments available for the current user.

kaenv3 -l
oarsub -I -t deploy

In this example, the base image selected for deployment is 'squeeze-x32-base'.

kadeploy3 -e squeeze-x32-base -f $OAR_NODEFILE

Then you can access the deployed node via ssh:

ssh root@nodoXX


Saving the modified image

In the machine execute these commands

rm /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
mount -o bind / /mnt

After exiting the machine, on the front-end execute the following commands, where xx is a numeric string between 01 and 16 (nodes availables at the moment) and archivoImagen.tgz is the filename of the image file:

ssh root@guanexx "cd /mnt; tar --posix --numeric-owner --one-file-system -zcf - *" > archivoImagen.tgz

Create the following file in an accessible location, taking into account the filename used and other similar parameters:

File: ambiente.dsc
name : ambiente

version : 1 
author : usuario 
tarball : /home/usuario/archivoImagen.tgz|tgz 
kernel : /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.26-2-amd64 
initrd : /boot/initrd.img-2.6.26-2-amd64 
fdisktype : 83 
filesystem : ext3 
visibility : private 
demolishing_env : 0 
environment_kind : linux 

In this case the image is going to be private, which means it can only be accessed and deployed by the user that created it. If you want it to be public, an administrator must do it, and must set the visibility parameter to public. Also, it is advisable to copy it to /home/images