August 24th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke The Google Summer of Code 2009 final evaluation deadline is today; 19 UTC. I don’t have time to summarize my summer here now, but there are two things I want to say to the world. First, I want to thank many people for enriching my summer. Second, I would like to announce the Clobi project on Google Code. »» Continue reading »» August 18th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke Hello you out there! I just started running the first serious test of the system I’ve developed during this year’s Google Summer of Code. If I wanted to put it in sensational words, the test could be called “Distribution of Particle Physics High Performance Computing Jobs among Multiple Computing Clouds”; just to get some readers . During the test, there will be some time I just sit around and watch my monitor, so I decided to share my experience about the new system with you and keep record of the test progress within this blog post. »» Continue reading »» June 30th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke In my blog post CernVM: how to set up a local ATLAS Software Release, I presented a brutal approach how to override CVMFS (CernVM‘s filesystem with HTTP backend) to install a local ATLAS Software release. Now I worked out a very clean and smooth solution. This approach allows: - to use the local ATLAS Software without “hacking” anything
- to use local software and software provided by CVMFS at the same time.
»» Continue reading »» June 30th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke In CernVM: local ATLAS Software — the clean solution I proposed to install an ATLAS Software release to an EBS volume. I did it to make it locally available in CernVM running on EC2. The approach allows to move an EBS volume from one EC2 instance to another without losing important components and functionality. Here are some hints (both, CernVM specific and general) to follow before installing the software via pacman. »» Continue reading »» June 21st, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke One of the main features of CernVM is its special filesystem CVMFS with http backend (based on FUSE). Using CernVM in the standard way, the different experiment softwares work out-of-the-box and are made accessible over the web via CVMFS. Although this is a great feature, I like to set up an ATLAS Software release locally — as real offline version — to be independent of the software-providing webservers. »» Continue reading »» June 14th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke In the past days I tried to set up CernVM on a Nimbus cloud to get an ATLAS Software Release (local version) running. On this way some problems came up. One of them could be solved by instructing the Xen hypervisor to choose the proper Linux kernel. »» Continue reading »» June 5th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke Famous computing clouds like EC2 and Nimbus offer the possibiliy to inject the public part of a keypair at boot time of a VM. Then you are able to log in as root using your personal keypair. For CernVM this fails for a simple reason. »» Continue reading »» June 4th, 2009 -- by Jan-Philip Gehrcke CernVM for Xen comes as loopback file, containing an Ext3 file system of about 9 GB size, whereas about 8.5 GB are free. Using this free space I tried to set up an Offline ATLAS Software Release (15.1.0). But the filesystem ran full and pacman aborted the setup. The goal is to deploy Virtual Machines of this image within the Nimbus Cloud, which currently does not support additional partitions. So I had to increase the size of the image / loopback file and to extend the filesystem afterwards. Therefore I basically used dd and resize2fs. »» Continue reading »» | |