= Customization of gLite Configuration = [[TracNav]] [[TOC(inline,depth=1)]] Site customization to QWG templates is done through a small set of templates used to define variables used as input by QWG templates. This doesn't cover OS basic configuration that is described in the page about [wiki:Doc/TemplateCustom template framework]. All site parameters related to QWG middleware are supposed to be declared in one template `site/glite/config.tpl` (or any other site-specific templates it may include). To start a new site, import the site parameter template [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl example]. The list of all available variables with their description and their default value can be consulted in template source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/defaults/glite.tpl. '''This template is a critical part of standard templates and should not be modified or duplicated'''. ''Note : Information in this page may document features or configuration options not present in the current release. These information are related to changes and improvement that will be available in next release and are already present in the [source:templates/branches/gLite-3.1 current development branch]. If you urgently require these features, [wiki:Download/QWGTemplates use content] of this branch.'' Documentation in this page is based on [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1 QWG templates for gLite 3.1]. Most of the documentation also applies to deprecated [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0 QWG templates for gLite 3.0], except when explicitly stated or for features supported only by 3.1 series. ''Note: this documentation often makes reference to a template called `site/glite/config.tpl`. This template used to be called `pro_lcg2_config_site.tpl` in the past. Both names are valid and taken into account by current templates, even though the namespaced name is the recommended one.'' = Service-Independent Configuration = This section contains information about how to tweak machine describe site configuration and how to build services shared by several node types, like VO configuration, LCAS/LCMAPS, Globus... == Machine types == QWG templates provide a template per machine type (CE, SE, RB, ...). They are located in {{{machine-types}}} directory and are intended to be generic templates. No modification should be needed. To configure a specific machine with gLite middleware, you just need to include the appropriate machine type template into the machine profile, after specifying a template containing the specific configuration for this particular machine with the variable {{{xxx_CONFIG_SITE}}} (look in the template for the exact name of the variable). Here is an example for configuring a Torque-based CE : {{{ object template profile_grid10; # Define specific configuration for a GRIF CE to be added to # standard configuration variable CE_CONFIG_SITE = "pro_ce_torque_grif"; # Configure as a CE (Torque) + Site's BDII include machine-types/ce; # # software repositories (should be last) # include repository_common; }}} In this example, {{{CE_CONFIG_SITE}}} specify the name of a template defining the Torque configuration. All the machine types share a common basic configuration, described in template `machine-types/base.tpl`. This template allows you to add site-specific configuration to this common base configuration (e.g. configuration of a monitoring agent). This is done by defining the variable {{{GLITE_BASE_CONFIG_SITE}}} to a template containing the site-specific configuration to be added to the common configuration (at the end of the common configuration). This variable can be defined, for example, in the template {{{pro_site_cluster_info.tpl}}}. The following sections describe specific variables that can be used with each machine type. The machine type template to include is specified at the beginning of the section as ''Base template''. In addition, to get more details, you can look at [source:templates/clusters/example-3.1/profiles examples]. === Creating a New Machine Type === All gLite machines types use a common base configuration, described in [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/machine-types/base.tpl machine-types/base.tpl]. This template is responsible in particular to do the base OS configuration, VO configuration and NFS configuration. When creating a new machine type derived from this gLite base machine type, it is necessary, at '''the very end''' of the new machine type, to include the gLite update and postconfig templates, using the following PAN statement: {{{ # gLite updates include { 'update/config' }; # Do any final OS configuration needed include { return(GLITE_OS_POSTCONFIG) }; }}} Without gLite OS postconfig template, `machine-types/base.tpl` is not expected to compile succesfully. == Site Information == Every EGEE site must publish some general information about it, mainly: * `SITE_NAME`: the site name * `SITE_LOC`: site geographical location. Format must be "City, Country". * `SITE_LAT`: site latitude (number) * `SITE_LONG`: site longitude (number) * `SITE_OTHER_INFO` : must contain at least the ROC your site is attached to, specified as "EGEE-ROC=xx" with xx the ROC country code. In addition, for WLCG sites, it must define the WLCG role (tier) and the attached T1. See example of [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/glite/config.tpl site parameters] for more details. * `SITE_EMAIL` : sysadmins contact for the site * `SITE_SECURITY_EMAIL` : site email contact for security issues. Default to `SITE_EMAIL`. * `SITE_USER_SUPPORT_EMAIL` : site email contact for user support. Default to `SITE_EMAIL`. See [http://goc.grid.sinica.edu.tw/gocwiki/How_to_publish_my_site_information GOC wiki] for more information on site informations. == VO Configuration == The list of VOs to configure on a specific node is defined in the variable `VOS`. Generally a site-wide default value is defined in `site/glite/config.tpl` (defined with operator `?=`). This value can be overridden on a specific machine by defining `VOS` variable in the machine profile, before including the machine type profile. An example VOS definition is : {{{ variable VOS ?= list('alice', 'atlas', 'biomed', 'calice', 'cms', 'cppm', 'dteam', 'dzero', 'egeode', 'lhcb', 'ops', 'planck', ); }}} ''Note : `dteam` and `ops` are mandatory VOs for EGEE sites.'' As an alternative to listing explicitly all the VOs supported on a node, it is possible to define variable `VOS` as the string `ALL` (instead of a list). In this case, all VOs with parameters available in the configuration (normally all the VOs registered in the [http://www.gridops.org CIC portal]) are configured. This specific value should normally be restricted to UIs where there are no VO accounts created. Its main usage is to let a user on a UI act as a member of any VO they may be registered in. On a gsissh-enabled UI, it is advisable to restrict the VOs allowed to connect to the UI with `gsissh` to a limited number of VOs when `VOS='ALL'`. See the section on UI configuration for more details. For each VO listed in `VOS`, there must be a template defining the VO parameters in `vo/params` or an entry in `vo/site/aliases`. The template name in `vo/params` must be the VO full name even though a VO alias name is used in `VOS`. If the VO to be added has no template to define its parameters, refer to the next section about adding a new VO. ''Note: VO alias names are alternative names for VOs locally defined. Unlike VO names which are guaranteed to be unique, VO aliases may clash with another alias or full name. They must be used mainly to maintain backward compatibility in existing configurations where a name other than the VO full name was used. The use of VO alias is '''strongly''' discouraged for a new configuration or new VOs added to an existing configuration.'' For some specific purposes, it is possible to execute a site-specific template just before starting the VO configuration, after the site parameters have been read and the OS configuration has been done. Use variable `NODE_VO_CONFIG` to specify the name of the template. === VO accounts === Templates related to VO configuration handle everything related to VO configuration on a specific node, including creation of VO accounts (pool accounts, SW manager...). See below for the parameters related to account creation. By default, the VO accounts are created locked to prevent their interactive use. There is one exception: if the variable `GSISSH_SERVER_ENABLED` equals `true`, these accounts are automatically unlocked. This happens mainly on [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#UI UI] and [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#VOBOX VOBOX]. === Defining a VO alias name === VO names, now based on a DNS-like name, can be quite long and not very convenient to use in the configuration. This is possible to define a local alias for the VO name and use it in the site configuration in place of the VO name. To define such an alias, a template [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/vo/site/aliases.tpl aliases.tpl] must exist in directory `vo/site` in your site or cluster directory. This template must define the variable `VOS_ALIASES` as a nlist where the key is the VO alias name and the value the actual VO name. For example: {{{ variable VOS_ALIASES ?= nlist( 'agata', 'vo.agata.org', 'apc', 'vo.apc.univ-paris7.fr', 'astro', 'astro.vo.eu-egee.org', 'lal', 'vo.lal.in2p3.fr', ); }}} === Site-Specific Defaults for VO Parameters === #VODefaultParams It is possible to define site-specific defaults for VOs that override standard default. This must be done by defining entry `DEFAULT` in nlist variable `VOS_SITE_PARAMS`. This entry is used to define parameters that will apply to all VOs if they are not defined explicitly in VO parameters. Each entry value must be the name of a structure template or a nlist defining any of these properties : * `create_home` : Create home directories for VO accounts. Default defined by variable `CREATE_HOME` variable. * `create_keys` : Create SSH keys for VO accounts. Default defined by variable `CREATE_KEYS` variable. * `unlock_accounts` : a regexp defining host names where the VO accounts must be unlocked * `pool_digits` : default number of digits to use when creating pool accounts * `pool_offset` : offset from VO base uid for the first pool account (normal users) * `pool_start` : index of the first account to create for a VO in its allocated VO range * `pool_size` : number of pool accounts to create by default for a VO (normal users) * `fqan_pool_size` : number of pool accounts to create for specific FQANs * `sw_mgr_role` : description of VO software manager role. Avoid to change default. * Location of standard services. See [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#DefaultServicesforaVO below]. ''Note: some properties are invalid in the context of the `DEFAULT` entry, in particular: `account_prefix`, `base_uid`, `gid`, `name`, `voms_servers`, `voms_roles`.'' === Overriding default VO Parameters === #VOSpecificParams In addition to define [#VODefaultParams default values] for VO parameters, it is possible to override default VO parameters, as specified in templates located in [source:trunk/grid/glite-3.2/vo/params vo/params], with site-specific values. This is possible to do it on a per-VO basis or for all VOs configured on a machine. This is done using the same variable (nlist) as for [#VODefaultParams default parameters], `VOS_SITE_PARAMS`. To override default parameters for one specific VO, the key must be the VO name, as used in `VOS` variable. To override default parameters for all configured VOs, use special entry `LOCAL`. ''Note: if a template `vo/site/VONAME` can be located, it'll be loaded even though there is no explicit entry for the VO into variable `VOS_SITE_PARAMS`.'' The allowed properties are the same as for [#VODefaultParams default parameters]. ''Note: some properties are invalid in the context of the `LOCAL` entry (as with `DEFAULT`), in particular: `account_prefix`, `base_uid`, `gid`, `name`, `voms_servers`, `voms_roles`.'' For example, to define a site-specific WMS for VO Alice, create a template `vo/site/alice.tpl` in your site directory like : {{{ structure template vo/site/alice; 'wms_hosts' = 'wms.example.org'; }}} Alternatively, you can define these parameters directly into `VOS_SITE_PARAMS` : {{{ variable VOS_SITE_PARAMS = nlist ('alice', nlist('wms_hosts' , 'wms.example.org', ), ); }}} === Site-specific parameters for VOMS role accounts === VOs often define roles in VOMS for specific purposes. For example, the ATLAS VO defines the role `production` which can only be used by users allowed to run production jobs. The roles defined for a VO are automatically retrieved by the `update.vo.config` and task. By default, a single account with an arbitrary suffix is automatically generated for each role found. For example, the following is an extract of the accounts generated for roles in the ATLAS VO: {{{ "voms_roles" ?= list( nlist("description", "SW manager", "fqan", "/atlas/Role=lcgadmin", "suffix", "s"), nlist("description", "production", "fqan", "/atlas/Role=production", "suffix", "p"), nlist("description", "pilot", "fqan", "/atlas/Role=pilot", "suffix", "hs"), ... }}} A particular site may wish to define its own parameters for a particular VOMS role. This can be done with nlist variable VOMS_ROLE_CONFIG_SITE. In this variable the key is a VO name and the value a nlist where the key is the role. The value of this second nlist has the same format as `VOS_SITE_PARAMS`. In this example, the Atlas role `production` is configured to use pool accounts: {{{ variable VOMS_ROLE_CONFIG_SITE = nlist("atlas", # VO nlist(escape("/atlas/Role=production"), # role FQAN nlist("pool_size", 20, "suffix", "prd") )); }}} To use pool accounts with all the specific FQANs declared in VO parameters, using the same number of accounts in the pool for each FQAN, it is possible to define propery `fqan_pool_size` in the [#VOSpecificParams VO-specific] entry or in the [#VODefaultParams DEFAULT] entry of `VOS_SITE_PARAMS` variable. For example, to use pool accounts for each specific FQAN of each VO, creating 10 accounts per FQAN, except for Atlas where 20 accounts per FQAN are created: {{{ variable VOS_SITE_PARAMS ?= nlist( 'DEFAULT', nlist('fqan_pool_size', 10), 'atlas', nlist('fqan_pool_size', 20), ); }}} === Adding a New VO === '''Note: the procedure to create a new VO definition here is for very specific cases. The normal procedure is to register it properly on [http://www.gridops.org CIC Portal] and generate the configuration information from the portal with `ant update.vo.config` (when using SCDB).''' Adding a new VO involves the creation of a template defining VO parameters. This template name must be the name you use to refer to the VO in rest of the configuration but is not required to be the real VO name (can be an alias used in the configuration). This template must be located in directory `vo/params`, in one of your cluster- or site-specific hierarchy of templates or in gLite templates. ''Note : if you create a template for a new VO, be sure to commit it to the QWG repository if you have write access to it, or to send it to the QWG developers. There is normally no reason for a VO definition not to be generally available.'' To create a template to describe a new VO, the easiest is to copy the template for an already configured VO. The main variables supported in this template are : * `name` : VO official name. No default. * `account_prefix` : prefix to use when creating accounts for the VO. Generally the 3 first letters of the VO name. No default. * `voms_servers` : a nlist describing VOMS server used by the VO, if any. If the VO has several (redundant) VOMS servers, this property can be a list of nlist. For each VOMS server, supported properties are : * `name` : name of the VOMS server. This is a name used internally by template. By default, template defining VOMS server certificate has the same name. No default. * `host` : VOMS server host name. No default. * `port` : VOMS server port associated with this VO. No default. * `cert` : template name, in `vo/certs` , defining VOMS server certificate. If not specified, defaults to the VOMS server name. * `voms_mappings` (replace deprecated `voms_roles`) : list of VOMS groups/roles supported by the VO. This property is optional. This is a nlist with one entry per mapping (mapped accounts). The supported properties for each entriy are : * `description` : description of the mapping. This property is informational, except for VO software manager where it must be `SW manager` (with this exact casing). * `pattern` (replace deprecated `name`) : VO group/role combinations mapped to this account. This can be a string or a list of string (if several group/role combinations are mapped to the same account). Each value can be either a role name (without `/ROLE=`) or a group/role combination in standard format `/group1/group2/.../ROLE=rolename`. Note that and `/ROLE` keywords are required to be upper case, that there may be several groups but only one role and if both are present, role must be the last one. Look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/vo/params/lhcb.tpl LHCb VO parameters] for an example. * `suffix` : suffix to append to `account_prefix` to build account name associated with this role. * `base_uid` : first uid to use for the VO. * `create_home` : Create home directories for VO accounts. Default defined by variable `CREATE_HOME` variable. * `create_keys` : Create SSH keys for VO accounts. Default defined by variable `CREATE_KEYS` variable. * `gid` : GID associated with VO accounts. Default : first pool account UID. * `pool_size` : number of pool accounts to create for the VO. Defaults : 200. * `pool_digits` : number of digits to use for pool accounts. Must be large enough to handle `pool_size`. Default is 3. * `pool_offset` : define offset from VO base uid for the first pool account * Location of standard services. See [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#DefaultServicesforaVO below]. In addition to this template, you need to have another template defining the public key of the VOMS server used by the VO. This template has the name of the VOMS server by default. It can be explicitly defined with `cert`property of a VOMS server entry. If the new VO is using an already used VOMS server, there is no need to add the certificate. === Default Services for a VO === Location of standard services to use with a specific VO can be defined either in the VO parameters or in the site-specific parameters for a VO. Services that can be configured are : * `proxy` : name of the proxy server used by the VO. No default, optional. * `rb_hosts` : LCG RB host name to use by default. Service ports will be set to default values. Can be a list or a single value. * `wms_hosts` : gLite WMS host name to use by default. Service ports will be set to default values. Can be a list or a single value. * `catalog` : define catalog type used by the VO. Optional. Must be defined only for VO still using `RLS` (value must be `rls` or `RLS`). In addition to variables above, it is possible to use the following variables if you need more control over service location or endpoints : * `nshosts` : name:port of the RB used by the VO (Network Server). No default. * `lbhosts` : name:port of the RB used by the VO (Logging and Bookeeping). No default. * `wms_nshosts` : name:port of the WMS used by the VO (Network Server). Can be a list or a single value. No default. * `wms_lbhosts` : name:port of the WMS used by the VO (Logging and Bookeeping). Can be a list or a single value. No default. * `wms_proxies` : endpoint URI of WMProxy used by the VO. Can be a list or a single value. No default. === VO-Specific Areas === There are a couple of variables available to customize VO-specific areas (software area, VO accounts home directories...) : * `VO_SW_AREAS` : a nlist with one entry per VO (key is the VO name as used in `VOS` variable). The value is a directory to use for the VO software area. Be sure to list this directory or its parent in `WN_SHARED_AREAS` if you want to use a shared filesystem for this area (this is highly recommended). Directories listed in this variable will be created with the appropriate permissions (`0755` for VO group). In addition to per VO entries, entry `DEFAULT` may be used to create one SW area for each configured VO on the current node : in this case the value is the parent directory for SW areas and the per VO directory name is the VO name (default) or the SW manager userid if variable `VO_SW_AREAS_USE_SWMGR` is defined to `true`. * `VO_SW_AREAS_USE_SWMGR` : when set to `true`, VO SW manager userid is used as a directory name for the SW area for VOs without an explicit entry in `VO_SW_AREAS`. * `VO_HOMES` : a nlist with one entry per VO (key is the VO name as used in `VOS` variable). The value is a directory prefix to use when creating home directories for accounts. A suffix will be added to this name corresponding to the VO role suffix for role accounts or the the account number for pool accounts. By default, VO accounts are created in `/home`. 2 keywords allow to create a subdirectory per VO under the directory parent to avoid too many entries at the same level. Look at documentation about [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#LCGCEConfiguration LCG CE] for more information. * `VO_SWMGR_HOMES` : a nlist with one entry per VO (key is the VO name as used in `VOS` variable). The value is a directory to use as the home directory for the VO software manager. If there is not entry for a VO, VO_HOMES is used. Main purpose of this variable is to define home directory for the software manager as the VO software area. This can be achieved easily by assigning `VO_SW_AREAS` to this variable. * `CREATE_HOME` : this variable controls creation of VO accounts home directories. It accepts 3 values : `true`, `false` and `undef`. `undef` is a ''conditional true'' : home directories are not created if they reside on a NFS shared file system (it is listed in `WN_SHARED_AREAS`) and the NFS server is not the current machine. === Tuning VO configuration on a specific node === Each machine type templates define VO configuration (pool accounts, gridmap file/dir...) appropriate to the machine type. If you want to change this configuration, on a specific node, you can use the following variables : * `NODE_VO_ACCOUNTS` (boolean) : VO accounts must be created for each VO initialized. Default : true. * `NODE_VO_GRIDMAPDIR_CONFIG` (boolean) : gridmapdir entries must be initialized for pool accounts. Default : `false`. * `NODE_VO_WLCONFIG` (boolean) : initialize workload management environment for each VO. Normally enabled only on resource brokers. Default : false. * `NODE_VO_CREATEHOME` (boolean) : create home directories for pool accounts. Default : true. In addition you can execute actions specific to the local machine by defining the following variable (mainly used to define a VO list specific to a node by assigning a non default value to `VOS` variable) : * `NODE_VO_CONFIG` (string) : site-specific template that must be included before actually doing VO intialization. Allow for specific VO modification to default VO configuration. Default : none. '''Note : before modifying default VO configuration for a specific machine, be sure what you want to do is valid. Misconfiguring VO can have dramatic effects on service availability.''' === Mapping of VOMS groups/roles into grid-mapfile === grid-mapfile is used as a source of mapping information between users DN and Unix accounts when this cannot be obtained from VOMS. Default behaviour for describing user mapping in grid-mapfile used to be mapping users with a specific role to the account corresponding to this role. Unfortunately, the result is unpredictable if a user has several roles in the VO. The default in QWG templates, starting with release [milestone:gLite-3.0.2-12 gLite-3.0.2-12], is to always map users to normal users in grid-mapfile. To obtain a mapping based on a specific role, users have to get a proxy with the required VOMS extensions using `voms-proxy-init --voms`. 2 variables allow to modify this default behaviour for generating grid-mapfile: * `VO_GRIDMAPFILE_MAP_VOMS_ROLES`: when set to `true`, a grid-mapfile entry is added for each valid VO FQANs in addition to the VO members. * `VO_VOMS_FQAN_FILTER`: this nlist allows to define on a per-VO basis what are the VOMS FQANs to add to the grid-mapfile. The key is a VO name or `DEFAULT` for the default entry. Default entry if present is applied to all VOs without an explicit entry. If there is no entry for a VO and there is no default entry defined, all VO users and valid FQANs are added to the grid-mapfile. This variable is ignored if `VO_GRIDMAPFILE_MAP_VOMS_ROLES` is not true. The entry value must be either a FQAN declared in VO parameters (without the initial /voname), a VOMS mapping description as declared in the VO parameters or undef to allow all users and valid FQAN. '/' is interpreted as all normal users (without a specific group or role). These 2 variables are mainly used on [#VOBOX VO boxes] where they should be defined with appropriate values by the standard configuration. == Allocation of Service Accounts == Some services allow to define a specific account to be used to run the service. In this case, there is one template for each of these accounts in `common/users`. The name of the template generally matches the user account created or, when the template is empty, the name of the service. A site can redefine account names or characteristics (uid, home directory...). To do this, you should not edit directly the standard templates as the changes will be lost in the next version of the template (or you will have to redo them by hand). You should create a `users` directory somewhere in your site or cluster hierarchy (e.g. under the `site` directory, not directly at the same level else it will not work without adjusting `cluster.build.properties`) and put your customized version of the template here. '''Note : don't change the name of the template, even if you change the name of the account used''' (else you'll need to modify standard templates requiring this user). == Accepted CAs == There is one template defining all the accepted CAs. This template is produced by people in charge of producing new releases of the list of CAs officially accepted by EGEE. If you need to adjust it, create a site or cluster-specific copy of `common/security/cas.tpl` in a directory `common/security`. If you need to update this template, refer to the standard [wiki:Development/Templates/Generated#TrustedCAsTemplate procedure] to do it. == Globus == Globus is used by most of the gLite services. Some variables allow to configure Globus parameters, in particular Globus ephemeral port ranges. * `GLOBUS_TCP_PORT_RANGE_MIN`: lower port in TCP ephemeral port range. Default: 20000. * `GLOBUS_TCP_PORT_RANGE_MAX`: upper port in TCP ephemeral port range. Must be greater or equal to lower port. Default: 25000. * `GLOBUS_UDP_PORT_RANGE_MIN`: lower port in UDP ephemeral port range. Default: none. * `GLOBUS_UDP_PORT_RANGE_MAX`: upper port in UDP ephemeral port range. Must be greater or equal to lower. Default: none. == LCAS / LCMAPS == #LCAS-LCMAPS LCAS and LCMAPS are 2 underlying services, generally used together, by most grid services to manage authorization and user mapping. LCAS is responsible for managing authorization based on configured policies (banned users, timeslots permitted...) and LCMAPS is responsible for mapping a grid DN to a Unix user account. LCMAPS configuration is based on VO configured and on VOMS [#MappingofVOMSgroupsrolesintogrid-mapfile group/role mapping] rules. LCAS can be configured with the following variables to restrict access to a grid resource like a CE: * `LCAS_BANNED_USERS`: list of user DNs forbidden access to the resource. By default, this list is empty (it as a template DN which will never match a real user). * `LCAS_TIMESLOT_ENTRIES`: a list of timeslot specification specifying when the resource is opened to grid access. See [http://www.nikhef.nl/pub/projects/grid/gridwiki/index.php/LCAS LCAS documentation] for more information on the format. By default, there is no restriction. == Shared gridmapdir == #SharedGridmapdir QWG templates support configuration of a shared gridmapdir between different machines. This is typically used when several CEs share the same WNs to ensure a consistent mapping of DNs to userids through all CEs. The QWG implementation is not restricted to CEs, even though it doesn't really make sense for other services. If several machines have to share the same gridmapdir, the variable `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_PATH` must be defined in their profile. This variable is undefined by default. When defined it must refer to an existing path on the machine that will use it or the gridmapdir will not be configured as shared. Even though it is not mandatory, gridmapdir is generally shared using NFS. To enable NFS-sharing of the gridmapdir, you must define variable `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_SERVER` to the host name serving the gridmapdir. It doesn't need to be one of the machine using it (for example it can be a dedicated NFS server). If the server is managed with Quattor, Quattor will ensure that the NFS is properly configured to export the reference gridmapdir (as specified by `SITE_DEF_GRIDMAPDIR` on this machine) as `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_PATH`. On the "clients" (the other machines using the shared gridmapdir), NFS will be configured to mount the shared gridmapdir and `SITE_DEF_GRIDMAPDIR` will be redefined as a link to this mount point. 2 other variables allow to customize gridmapdir sharing according to your needs: * `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_PROTOCOL`: if anything different from `nfs`, QWG templates will not configure NFS for sharing the gridmapdir. The sharing must be done by other means in such a way that `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_PATH` is available when gridmapdir is configured on the client machine. Default: `nfs`. * `GRIDMAPDIR_SHARED_CLIENTS`: a list of machines sharing the gridmapdir. Default: `CE_HOSTS` variable (all the CEs sharing the same WNs). == Shared File Systems == It is recommended to use a shared file system mounted (at least) on CE and WNs for VO software areas. It is also sometimes convenient to use a shared file system for VO pool accounts (this is more or less a requirement to run MPI jobs). Currently, QWG templates support the use of NFS or non-NFS shared file systems but only the NFS service is configured by the templates. For other distributed file system (AFS, LUSTRE, GPFS...), you must add the necessary configuration to the site-specific configuration. Configuration is done by the following variables : * `WN_SHARED_AREAS` : a nlist with one entry per file system which is shared between worker nodes and CE (key is the escaped file system mount point). See below the format of the entries for NFS-served file systems. For other distributed file systems providing a global namespace (like AFS, LUSTRE, GPFS), the entry value must be `undef`. It is important to add an entry in this list for each shared file system, even though not NFS served, as some parts of the configuration (eg. Torque configuration) use this information to distinguish between local and shared file systems. * `NFS_AUTOFS` : when true, use `autofs` to mount NFS file systems on NFS clients. This is the recommended setting, as this is the only one to avoid complex inter-dependency in startup order. But for backward compatibility, default value is false. ''__Note__ : variable WN_NFS_AREAS has been deprecated and replaced by WN_SHARED_AREAS. It the latter is not defined, WN_NFS_AREAS is used if defined.'' ''__Note__ : non shared filesystem for home directories is supported only with Globus job manager `lcgpbs`.'' NFS server is configured on any machine (whatever its machine type) managed by Quattor and listed as the NFS server for one of the entries in `WN_SHARED_AREAS`. All actions required are done automatically. If the NFS server listed is not managed by Quattor, it is necessary to force `CREATE_HOME` to `true` on one machine. NFS client can be potentially configured on any machine type but by default this is done only on CE and WNs. To configure the client on other machine types, define variable `NFS_SERVER_ENABLED` to one the following values: * `undef`: configure NFS client if needed according to the configuration (`WN_SHARED_AREAS` contents). * `true`: force configuration of NFS client even though there is no NFS file system to mount on the machine. === Specifying server of a NFS file system === In variable `WN_SHARED_AREAS`, the value of each entry specified the NFS server for the file system and optionally the file system mount point on the server if it is different than the one used on the clients. The general format for the value is a URL like: {{{ nfs|nfs3|nfs4://server[/mount/point] }}} When the protocol specified is `nfs` (without an explicit version), `server` will be configured with both versions and client, unless an explicit version is request (see next section), will be configured with v3. The legacy format: {{{ server[:/mount/point] }}} is still supported and is equivalent to: {{{ nfs3://server[/mount/point] }}} === Selecting NFS version to use on the client === For NFS, both v3 and v4 are supported. When the version is specified in the protocol token of the server URL (see previous section), this version is used both on the server and on the clients. Otherwise both versions are configured on the server and the version configured on the client depends on the following variables: * `NFS_CLIENT_VERSION`: a nlist with one entry per node whose key is the escaped client host name and the value is a string ('3' or '4'). If the client configured has an entry in this variable, the specified NFS version is used. * `NFS_CLIENT_DEFAULT_VERSION`: a nlist where entry keys are either an escaped regexp matched against the node being configured or 'DEFAULT'. If host name of the client being configured is matched by one of the regexp, the specified value is used. Else if `DEFAULT` entry is present it is used. * If no match was found with the previous variables, v3 is used. Suppose you want to configure v4 on all your grid nodes and only on these nodes and that their host names always start with prefix `grid` and belonging to domain `example.org`, you can use the following definition: {{{ variable NFS_CLIENT_DEFAULT_VERSION = nlist( 'DEFAULT', '3', '^grid.*\.example\.org$', '4', ); }}} === Specifying NFS options === There are two variables to define mount options to be used with NFS file systems : * `NFS_DEFAULT_MOUNT_OPTIONS` : defines mount options to be used by default, if none are explicitly defined for a filesystem. * `NFS_MOUNT_OPTS` : defines mount options to be used for a specific file system. This variable is a nlist with one entry per file system : key must be the escaped path of the mount point. === Defining NFS exports === NFS exports can be defined using a set of variables. By default only CE and worker nodes are given access to NFS server. This variables can be redefined either in NFS server profile, in the cluster the NFS server belongs to or in the gLite site parameters used by NFS server. ''Note : the following variables don't configure filesystem mounting. For this see [wiki:Doc/gLite/TemplateCustomization#SharedFileSystems Configuring shared filesystems].'' Variables available to customize the NFS export ACL are : * `NFS_CE_HOSTS` : list of CE hosts requiring access to NFS server (default is CE_HOST) * `NFS_WN_HOSTS` : list of WN hosts requiring access to NFS server (default is WN_HOSTS) * `NFS_LOCAL_CLIENTS` : list of other local hosts requiring access to NFS server These variables can be a string, a list or a nlist. A string value is interpreted as a list with one element. When specified as a list or string, the value must be a regexp matching name of nodes that must be given access to NFS server. In this case, the access rights (export options) is the string specified in variable `NFS_DEFAULT_RIGHTS`. When specified as a nlist, the key must be an '''escaped''' regexp matching node names (in exports format (only `*` and `?` wilcards permitted) and the value is the export options between `()`. ''Note : when possible, this is recommended to replace default value for NFS_WN_HOSTS (list of all WNs) by one or several regexps matching WN names to reduce the number of hosts on the export line.'' `NFS_DEFAULT_RIGHTS` is a nlist which must contain a `DEFAULT` entry used for any file system without an explicit entry and optionally one entry per file system (key is the escaped file system path) when defaults are not appropriate. If not defined, default is `rw` with root squashing enabled for all file systems (`DEFAULT` entry), except `/home` where root squashing is disabled. Antoher variable, `NFS_CLIENT_HOSTS`, allows to define the clients allowed to access the file system on a per file system basis. There is a default entry (`DEFAULT`) used for any file system without an explicit entry. The default value for default entry is all the hosts specified by `NFS_CE_HOSTS`, `NFS_WN_HOSTS` and `NFS_LOCAL_CLIENTS`. Keys specifying file systems must be the '''escaped''' file system mount point. Host list of allowed clients may be specified using regexps in export format. ''Note: currently `NFS_CLIENT_HOSTS` is used to build the list of hosts in `exports` file but has no impact on the mounting of file systems on clients.'' === Relocation of Home Directories of VO Accounts === When using a NFS-served file system for home directories, the traditional approach to mount it under '/home' has several drawbacks. In particular, all service accounts also have NFS-based home directories and this may impact all services when NFS becomes unavailable or irresponsive. On the other hand, this is desirable to keep a unified configuration shared by machines sharing the NFS file systems and the other machines (e.g. WMS, VOBOX... all machines with VO accounts). With QWG templates this is easily done by defining variable `VO_HOMES_NFS_ROOT` to the directory parent to use for home directories on a machine with NFS client configured, when parent described in variable `VO_HOMES` is `/home`. The directory pointed by `VO_HOMES_NFS_ROOT` must correspond to an entry (or children of an entry) in `WN_SHARED_AREAS`. Look at site parameter [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/glite/config.tpl example] for more details. When modifying an existing configuration, a careful planning is needed. This cannot be done on the fly. To avoid a long reconfiguration of `ncm-accounts`, this generally involves: * On the NFS server, remounting the file system containing home directies on the new mount point * Delete accounts using `/home` (except `ident`) from `/etc/password`. This can be done with a script deployed and executed with `ncm-filecopy` * Remove symlink `/home` if any (autofs configuration) and create a directory `/home` * Update your site parameters and deploy the changes, defining `ncm-useraccess` as a post-dependency for `ncm-accounts` if it is used in the configuration. This will ensure that during deployment all accounts are recreated and the ssh, Kerberos... configuration for the user is done. === NFS Server === __Base template__ : `machine-types/nfs`. When using this template, it is possible to configure a machine as a dedicated NFS server whose configuration is shared with grid machines for file system configuration and accounts. But in QWG templates, any gLite machine type will be configured as a NFS server as soon as the machine is listed as the NFS server for one of the file systems in `WN_SHARED_AREAS`. == Monitoring == The variable MONITORING_CONFIG_SITE, which defaults to 'site/monitoring/config', can be used to specify the monitoring tools template that will be included. == RPMs Repositories == [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/repository/config/glite.tpl repository/config/glite.tpl] describes the RPM repositories used to locate RPMs required by gLite templates. Default RPM repository configuration in QWG Templates requires 5 RPMs repositories plus an optional one for each gLite version. Name given here are the default ones. * `glite_repos_prefix` : gLite RPMs shipped with gLite. * ''glite_repos_prefix''`_externals` : RPMs required by gLite and shipped with it but developed and maintained outside gLite. * ''glite_repos_prefix''`_updates` : official updates to gLite base RPMs, as provided by gLite releases. * ''glite_repos_prefix''`_unofficial` (optional) : unofficial updates to gLite base RPMs used at the site. Normally empty. * `mpi` : RPMs related to MPI. * `ca` : CA RPMs as distributed by Grid PMA. `glite_repos_prefix` can be customized without editing the standard template, defining `REPOSITORY_GLITE_PREFIX` variable. If not explicitly defined, it defaults to `glite_3_0_0` for gLite 3.0 and `glite_3_1` for gLite 3.1. All required repositories must have an associated template whose name is the same as the repository, in site- or cluster-specific templates. Optional repository is ignored if its associated template is not present. Each template describe the content of the repositories. When using [wiki:Doc/SCDB/SWRepositories SCDB], these templates are maintained with command `ant update.rep.templates`. ''Note : it is not required to use this structure and you can edit this template to match your local conventions, if different. When upgrading QWG templates, be sure to revert changes to this template.'' A template version of these RPM repositories is distributed as part of examples ([source:templates/trunk/sites/example/repository]). They can be used to compile examples but for deployment of a real configuration, you need to build your own version of these templates. You can create an initial version of these repositories by downloading RPMs from the URL mentioned at top the template examples with `wget` or [source:SCDB/tags/pro/src/utils/misc/rpmUpdates.pl src/utils/misc/rpmUpdates.pl]. Then update the URL at the top of the template examples to match your local repositories. = Service-specific Configuration = == CE Configuration == __Base template__ : `machine-types/ce`. QWG templates can handle configuration of the LCG (gLite 3.1 only) or the CREAM CE and its associated batch system (LRMS). Most of the configuration description is common to both type of CE. In gLite 3.1, CE type defaults to LCG for backward compatibility whereas in gLite 3.2 it defaults to CREAM, the only CE availabe. CE type selection is done with variable `CE_TYPE` which must be `lcg` or `cream`. This variable is ignore in gLite 3.2. LRMS selection is done with variable `CE_BATCH_NAME`. '''There is no default'''. The supported LRMS and associated values are: * Torque/MAUI: `torque2` * Condor: `condor` ''Note: the value of `CE_BATCH_NAME` must match a directory in `common` directory of gLite templates.'' ''Note: previous versions of QWG templates used to require definition of `CE_BATCH_SYS`. This is deprecated : this variable is now computed from `CE_BATCH_NAME`.'' Site-specific gLite parameters must declare the host name of the CEs that share the same worker nodes. All the CEs declared in one set of gLite parameters (one gLite parameter template) will share the same WNs. To configure several CEs with distinct worker nodes, you must create separate clusters. Host name of the CEs can be declared with one of the following two variables: * `CE_HOSTS`: a list of host names corresponding to the different CEs sharing the same WNs. * `CE_HOST`: for backward compatibility, when there is only one CE, this variable can be defined to its name, instead of using `CE_HOSTS`. In addition, 2 other variables independent of the LRMS are available: * `CE_PRIV_HOST`: alternate name of CE host. Used in configuration where WNs are in a private network and CE has 2 network names/adresses. This variable is not (yet) supported with multiple CEs. * `CE_WN_ARCH`: OS architecture on CE worker nodes. Due to limitation in the way this information is published now, this is a CE-wide value. If you have both 64-bit and 32-bit WNs, you must publish 32-bit (`i386`). Default value is based on CE architecture. === Sharing WNs between several CEs === #CESharingWNs QWG templates allow to configure several CEs sharing the same WNs. They must share the same gLite parameters and the variable `CE_HOSTS` must contain all the CE host names. They can be LCG CE and/or CREAM CE. If you want to mix LCG and CREAM CE, it is recommended to maintain a separate list of for each CE type and build `CE_HOSTS` by merging them as in the following example: {{{ variable CE_HOSTS_CREAM ?= list('cream1.example.org','cream2.example.org'); variable CE_HOSTS_LCG ?= list('lcg1.example.org','lcg2.example.org'); variable CE_HOSTS ?= merge(CE_HOSTS_LCG,CE_HOSTS_CREAM); }}} In addition, when using several CEs with the same WNs, it is necessary to configure a [#SharedGridmapdir shared gridmapdir]. This is '''required''' to ensure consistency of DN/userid mapping across CEs. === CREAM CE Specific Configuration === #CREAMConfig CREAM CE has some unique features and requirements, not available in LCG CE, that can be easily customized with QWG templates. To identify CREAM CEs among all defined CEs, they must belong to the list `CE_HOSTS_CREAM`, as suggested [#CESharingWNs above]. CREAM CE uses internally a MySQL database. The database connexion can be configured with the following variables: * `CREAM_MYSQL_ADMINUSER` (optional): MySQL user with administrative privileges. Default: `root`. * `CREAM_MYSQL_ADMINPWD` (required): password of MySQL administrative account. No default. * `CREAM_DB_USER` (optional): MySQL user used by CREAM CE components. Default: `creamdba`. * `CREAM_DB_PASSWORD` (required): password of MySQL user used by CREAM CE components. No default. * `CREAM_MYSQL_SERVER` (optional): host name running the MySQL server used by the CE. Default: CE host name. In particular, CREAM CE has a WMS-like management of user input and output sandbox : they are all stored in a dedicated area, outside user home directory. In a configuration where home directories are shared through NFS (or another distributed file system), this requires an additional to share this sandbox area too. It is also possible to share the sandbox area between the CE and the WNs, even though the home directories are not. Variables related to sandbox management are: * `CREAM_SANDBOX_MPOINTS`: a nlist defining the CE whose sandbox area must be shared. Only the CE with an entry in this nlist will have their sandbox area shared with WN. The key is the CE host name and the value is the mount point to use on the WN. There is no need for the mount point on the WN to be the same as on the CE. There is no default for this variable. * `CREAM_SANDBOX_DIRS`: a nlist defining where the sandbox area is located on each CE. There may be one entry per CE and one default entry (key=`DEFAULT`). If no entry apply to a CE, the standard default, `/var/cream_sandbox`, is used. * `CREAM_SANDBOX_SHARED_FS`: a nlist defining the protocol to use for sharing sandbox area. There may be one entry per CE and one default entry (key=`DEFAULT`). If undefined, `nfs` is assumed. If defined but no entry apply to the current CE (and there is no default entry), assume something other than NFS. When NFS is used to share sandbox area, the [Shared File Systems usual NFS variables] apply to define NFS version to use, mount options... ''Note: sandbox area sharing is configured independently of other file systems specified in `WN_SHARED_AREAS`. Sandbox areas are normally not specified in `WN_SHARED_AREAS` but if they are, this takes predence over the specific configuration done with `CREAM_SANDBOX_MPOINTS`.'' When using sandbox sharing with several CEs (specified in the same `CE_HOSTS` variable), it is important to define a distinct mount point for each CE. Below is an example showing how to define `CREAM_SANDBOX_MPOINTS` based on `CE_HOSTS_CREAM`: {{{ variable CREAM_SANDBOX_MPOINTS ?= { foreach (i;ce;CE_HOSTS_CREAM) { SELF[ce] = '/cream_sandbox/'+ce; }; SELF; }; }}} A few other variables specific to CREAM CE are available, in particular to define log locations: * `CREAM_LOG_DIR`: location of CREAM CE log. Default: `/var/log/glite`. * `BLPARSER_LOG_DIR`: location of BLParser log file. Default: `/var/log/glite`. * `GLEXEC_LOG_DESTINATION`: must be `syslog` or `file`. Default is `syslog` for CREAM 1.5 and `file` for later versions. * `GLEXEC_LOG_DIR`; location of glexec log files. '''This must be different from the 2 other log locations''' because the permissions are not compatible (none belong to `root`). It is ignored if `GLEXEC_LOG_DESTINATION` is set to `syslog`. Default: `/var/log/glexec`. * `CEMON_ENABLED`: if `true`, CEMonitor is configured and started. Default: `false` in CREAM 1.6 and later. ''Note: CEMonitor is not used by any standard gLite components/services.'' CREAM CE relies on ''BLParser'' to interact with the batch system and get status back about submitted jobs. The BLParser must run on a machine with access to the batch system logs. The default is to run it on the LRMS master, which can be defined explicitly with variable `LRMS_SERVER_HOST` and defaults to the first CE in `CE_HOSTS`. For specific needs, it is possible to define explicitly the BLParser host with variable `BLPARSER_HOST`. CREAM CE implements a job purger to clean database entries and sandboxes related to completed jobs (aborted, canceled or done). Default configuration should be appropriate but for specific needs, the following variables can be used to customize the job purger policy: * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_RATE`: interval between 2 runs of the purger in minutes. Default: `720`. * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_POLICY_ABORTED`: for jobs in `ABORTED` state, job age in days before purging it. Default: `10`. * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_POLICY_CANCELED`: for jobs in `CANCELED` state, job age in days before purging it. Default: `10`. * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_POLICY_DONEOK`: for jobs in `DONE-OK` state, job age in days before purging it. Default: `15`. * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_POLICY_DONEFAILED`: for jobs in `DONE-FAILED` state, job age in days before purging it. Default: `10`. * `CREAM_JOB_PURGE_POLICY_REGISTERED`: for jobs in `REGISTERED` state, job age in days before purging it. Default: `2`. For more information on CREAM CE configuration and troubleshooting, refer to the CREAM CE [http://grid.pd.infn.it/cream/ official web site]. Most of these variables are usually defined in [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/glite/config.tpl gLite parameters]. Look at the [/changeset?new=5066%40templates%2Ftrunk%2Fsites%2Fexample%2Fsite%2Fglite%2Fconfig.tpl&old=4604%40templates%2Ftrunk%2Fsites%2Fexample%2Fsite%2Fglite%2Fconfig.tpl example changes] to illustrate modifications typically required to an existing gLite parameter template to support CREAM CEs. If experiencing difficulties during the initial installation, be sure to read [/wiki/ReleaseNotes/gLite-3.2#KI3203CREAMCE release notes]. === Home Directories of VO Accounts === QWG templates support both shared and non shared home directories for VO accounts. See section on NFS Server for more information on how to configure shared home directories. Shared home directories are the recommended configuration and are required to support MPI. Independently of the shared/non shared configuration, the following variable is used to configure home directories for VO accounts: * `VO_HOMES`: a nlist defining parent of home directories for all the VO accounts. For each entry, the key is the VO name as defined in variable `VOS` (it may be a VO alias name) and the value is the parent directory for the corresponding accounts (pool accounts and other accounts associated with roles). A special entry, `DEFAULT` may be used to define home directory parent for all the VOs without an explicit entry. When supporting multiple VOs, the number of accounts can be very large (several thousands). This may lead to performance problems if they all share a common parent. In the value defining the parent directory, it is possible to use the following keywords to create a per-VO parent under a common root (in a common file system): * `@VONAME@` : will be expanded to the VO full name * `@VOALIAS@` : will be expanded to the VO alias name locally defined. When possible, it is better to use the VO full name which is unique and will not change. For example, the following variable create one directory per VO under `/home` and accounts for each VO will be created in the VO-specific directory: {{{ variable VO_HOMES ?= nlist( 'DEFAULT', '/home/@VONAME@', ); }}} When modifying an existing configuration, a careful planning is needed. This cannot be done on the fly. To avoid a long reconfiguration of `ncm-accounts`, this generally involves: * On the NFS server, move existing home directories to the appropriate location * Delete accounts using `/home` (except `ident`) from `/etc/password`. This can be done with a script deployed and executed with `ncm-filecopy` * Update your site parameters and deploy the changes, defining `ncm-useraccess` as a post-dependency for `ncm-accounts` if it is used in the configuration. This will ensure that during deployment all accounts are recreated and the ssh, Kerberos... configuration for the user is done. === Defining Queues === Definition of queues is done independently of the LRMS used. The following variables are used to define queues: * `CE_QUEUES_SITE` : a nlist defining for each queue the list of VOs allowed to access the queue and optionally the specific attributes of the queue. Access list for queue is defined under `vos` key, attributes under `attlist` key. The value for each key is a nlist where the key is the queue name. For access list, the value is a list of VO allowed or denied access to the queue (to deny access, prefix VO name with a `-`). For queue attributes, the value is a nlist where the key is a Torque attribute and the value the attribute value. By default one queue is created for each VO. Look at [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl example] for more information on how to customize default configuration. To undefine a standard queue, define its `attlist` to `undef`. * `CE_LOCAL_QUEUES` : a list of Torque queue to define that will not be available for grid usage (accessible only with standard Torque commands). This list has a format very similar to `CE_QUEUES`, except that key containing queue name is called `names` instead of `vos` and that its value is useless. ''Note: in previous version of the templates, customization of queue list was done by defining `CE_QUEUES` variable in site parameters. In this case the creation of the queue for each VO had to be done in site templates. This has been changed and sites must now use `CE_QUEUES_SITE` to define site-specific queues or redefine attributes of standard queues.'' === PBS/Torque === PBS/Torque related templates support the following variables : * `TORQUE_SERVER_HOST`: name of Torque server. Defaults to `CE_HOST`. * `TORQUE_SERVER_PRIV_HOST`: alternate name of Torque server on the private network if any. Defaults to `CE_PRIV_HOST`. * `TORQUE_SUBMIT_FILTER` : this variable allow to redefine the script used as a Torque submit filter. A default filter is provided in standard templates. * `TORQUE_TMPDIR` : normally defined to refer to the working area created by Torque for each job, on a local filesystem. Define as `null` if you don't want job current directory to be redefined to this directory. * `TORQUE_SERVER_ATTRS` : nlist allowing to customize all server-related Torque parameters. For the complete list of supported parameters and default values, look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/common/torque2/server/config.tpl common/torque2/server/config.tpl]. To undefine an attribute defined by default, define it to `undef`. * `WN_ATTRS` : this variable is a nlist with one entry per worker node (key is the node fullname). Each value is a nlist consisting in a set of PBS/Torque attribute to set on the node. Values are any `key=value` supported by `qmgr set server` command. One useful value is `state=offline` to cause a specific node to drain or `state=online` to reenable the node (suppressing `state=offline` is not enough to reenable the node). One specific entry in `WN_ATTRS` is `DEFAULT` : this entry is applied to any node that doesn't have a specific entry. If you want to avoïd re-enabling a node explicitly, you can have the `DEFAULT` entry be defined with the `state=free` arguments. For instance, you could define : {{{ variable WN_ATTRS ?= nlist( "DEFAULT", nlist("state","free"), "mynode.mydomain.com", nlist("state","offline") ); }}} * `WN_CPUS_DEF` : default number of CPU per worker node. * `WN_CPUS` : a nlist with one entry per worker node (key is the node fullname) having a number of CPUs different from the default. * `WN_CPU_SLOTS` : number of job slot (Torque processors) to create per physical CPU. Default is 2 to allow both a normal job slot and a standing reservation reserved for short deadling jobs. For more details about all of these variables, their format and their default values, look at template defining [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/defaults/glite/config.tpl default values] for gLite related variables. === MAUI === MAUI is configured using the following variables : * `MAUI_SERVER_CONFIG` : nlist defining site-specific value for MAUI server base parameters. Keys are MAUI configuration parameters and value are parameter values. Defaults should be appropriate. Look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/common/maui/server/config.tpl common/maui/server/config.tpl] for a list of supported parameters. * `MAUI_SERVER_POLICY` : nlist defining site-specific value for MAUI server scheduling policy parameters. Keys are MAUI configuration parameters and value are parameter values. Defaults should be appropriate. Look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/common/maui/server/config.tpl common/maui/server/config.tpl] for a list of supported parameters. * `MAUI_SERVER_RMCFG` : nlist defining site-specific value for MAUI server resource manager configuration parameters. Keys are MAUI configuration parameters and value are parameter values. Defaults should be appropriate. Look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.1/common/maui/server/config.tpl common/maui/server/config.tpl] for a list of supported parameters. * `MAUI_GROUP_PARAMS` : nlist defining group-specific parameters. Valid values are anything accepted by MAUI configuration directive `GROUPCFG`. Key is either a group (VO) name or `DEFAULT`. Default entry is applied to all groups (VOs) defined but without an explicit entry. * `MAUI_USER_PARAMS` : nlist defining user-specific parameters. Valid values are anything accepted by MAUI configuration directive `USERCFG`. Key must be a user name. * `MAUI_CLASS_PARAMS` : nlist defining class-specific parameters. Valid values are anything accepted by MAUI configuration directive `CLASSCFG`. Key is either a class name or `DEFAULT`. Default entry is applied to all classes defined but without an explicit entry. * `MAUI_ACCOUNT_PARAMS` : nlist defining account-specific parameters. Valid values are anything accepted by MAUI configuration directive `ACCOUNTCFG`. Key must be a account name. * `MAUI_NODE_PARAMS` : nlist defining node-specific parameters. Keys must match worker node names or be `DEFAULT`. Values must be a nlist where keys are any valid keyworkds accepted by MAUI configuration directive `NODECFG` and values the value for the corresponding keyword. * `MAUI_STANDING_RESERVATION_ENABLED` : boolean value defining if creation of 1 standing reservation per node is enabled or not. Default : true. Note that use of this feature requires a proper setting of variable `WN_CPU_SLOT` (normally 2). * `MAUI_STANDING_RESERVATION_CLASSES` : nlist defining classes which may access standing reservations. Key must be either a WN name or `DEFAULT`. Default entry is applied to all WNs without an explicit entry. Value must be a comma-separated list of classes. * `MAUI_WN_PART_DEF` : default node partition to use with worker nodes. * `MAUI_WN_PART` : a nlist with one entry per worker node (key is node fullname). The value is the name of the MAUI partition where to place the specific worker node. * `MAUI_GROUP_PART : nlist defining partitions whose access is allowed on a per group (VO) basis. Key is either a group (VO) name or `DEFAULT`. Default entry is applied to all groups (VOs) defined but without an explicit entry. If not defined, defaults to `MAUI_WN_PART_DEF`. * `MAUI_SERVER_CONFIG_SITE`: string containing literal MAUI configuration that must be included into final MAUI configuration, in addition to configuration provided by other variables. * `MAUI_MONITORING_TEMPLATE`: template name to use to configure MAUI monitoring script (normally a cron job). The default value should be appropriate. To disable it set the value to `null` but be aware of possible effects on CE publication (if using cache mode). * `MAUI_MONITORING_FREQUENCY` : frequency of checks that MAUI daemon is running and responding. Default is 15 minutes. In case of MAUI instability, can be lowered to limit impact on CE behaviour. Format is cron frequency format. ''Note: if `MAUI_CONFIG` variable is defined, the content of this variable must contain the full content of `maui.cfg` file and variables `MAUI_SERVER_CONFIG`, `MAUI_SERVER_POLICY` and `MAUI_RMCFG` are ignored.'' In addition to the variable to configure MAUI itself, there is one variable related to resource publishing into the BDII. See [#CEBDII specific section]. === RSH and SSH Configuration === By default Quattor doesn't configure any RSH or SSH trust relationship between CE and WNs if home directories are on a shared filesystem declared in variable `WN_SHARED_AREAS`. Else it configures SSH with host-based authentication. By default RSH is always configured with an empty `hosts.equiv` file. If this doesn't fit your needs, you can explicitly control RSH and SSH configuration with the following variables : * `CE_USE_SSH` : if `undef` (default), configuration is based on use of a shared filesystem for home directories. Else it explicitly set whether to configure SSH host-based authentication (`true`) or not (`false`). * `SSH_HOSTBASED_AUTH_LOCAL` : when this variable is true and `CE_USE_SSH` is false, configure SSH host-based authentication on each WN restricted to the current WN (ability to use SSH without entering a password only for ssh to the current WN). This is sometimes required by some specific software. * `RSH_HOSTS_EQUIV` : If true, `/etc/hosts.equiv` is created with an entry for the CE and each WN. If false an empty `/etc/hosts.equiv` is created. If `undef`, nothing is done. Default is `undef`. * `SSH_DAEMON_SITE_CONFIG`: if defined, must be a nlist containing a valid list of `sshd` options. if `null`, default configuration for `sshd` is not defined and the site must build the configuration with a site-specific method. === CE Publishing into BDII === #CEBDII When using Torque/MAUI, the default plugin provided with gLite to retrieve the number of job slots configured and the number of free slots is using Torque. This doesn't allow to reflect correctly a configuration where advanced MAUI features like ''standing reservations'' are used. An alternative plugin, based on MAUI, is available and distributed with QWG templates (even though it is totally independent). To use this MAUI-based plugin instead of the Torque-based one, define the following variable in your [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/glite/config.tpl gLite parameters] (this variable is ignored if the LRMS used in not Torque): {{{ variable GIP_CE_USE_MAUI ?= true; }}} This variable is `true` by default in QWG templates. Set it to `false` if you want to use the standard plugin. Another specific feature provided by QWG templates with respect to CE publishing into the BDII is the ability to run plugins in charge of updating CE dynamic information as a cron job on the LRMS host and to cache their outputs for later use by GIP itself. This is generally necessary in a multiple CE configuration and this is mandatory with MAUI-based plugins when using Torque/MAUI as MAUI commands can be executed only on the MAUI server. This ''cache mode'' is also lowering the polling rate on the batch system and protects again temporary failure of the LRMS to respond to the inquiry command (this is quite usual with MAUI when it is overloaded). To activiate this feature, you need to define the following variable in your [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/glite/config.tpl gLite parameters]: {{{ variable GIP_CE_USE_CACHE ?= true; }}} This variable default depends on the number of CE configured. When there is only one CE, it is `false` for backward compatibility, else it is `true`. But it is recommended to set it to `true` inconditionally. ''Note: cache mode, even though it is essentially independent of the LRMS, is currently implemented only for MAUI. Defining this variable for unsupported LRMS has no effect.'' === CE Status === CE related templates use variable `CE_STATUS` to control CE state. Supported values are : * `Production` : this is the normal state. CE receives and processes jobs. * `Draining` : CE doesn't accept new jobs but continues to execute jobs queued (as long as they are WNs available to execute them). * `Closed` : CE doesn't accept new jobs and jobs already queued are not executed. Only running jobs can complete. * `Queuing` : CE accepts new jobs but will not execute them. `CE_STATUS` indicates the desired status of the CE. All the necessary actions are taken to set the CE in the requested status. Default status (if variable is not specified) is `Production`. This variable can be used in conjunction to [wiki:Doc/LCG2/TemplateLayout#PBSTorque WN_ATTRS] to drain queues and/or nodes. === Restarting LRMS Client === It is possible to force a restart of LRMS (batch system) client on all WNs by defining variable `LRMS_CLIENT_RESTART`. This variable, if present, must be a nlist with one entry per WN to restart (key is the WN name) or 'DEFAULT' for all WNS without a specific entry. When the value is changed (or first defined), this triggers a LRMS client restart. The value itself is not relevant but it is advised to use a timestamp for better tracking of forced restart. For example to force a restart on all WNs, you can add the following definition : {{{ variable LRMS_CLIENT_RESTART = nlist( 'DEFAULT', '2007-03-24:18:33', ); }}} A good place to define this variable is template `pro_site_cluster_info` in cluster `site` directory. '''Note : this feature is currently implemented only for Torque v2 client.''' === Run-Time Environment === gLite 3.0 templates introduce a new way to define `GlueHostApplicationSoftwareRunTimeEnvironment`. Previously it was necessary to define a list of all tags in the site configuration template. As most of these tags are standard tags attached to a release of the middleware, there is now a default list of tags defined in the default configuration site template, [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/defaults/site.tpl defaults/site.tpl]. To supplement this list with tags specific to the site (e.g. `LCG_SC3`), define a variable `CE_RUNTIMEENV_SITE` instead of defining `CE_RUNTIMEENV` : {{{ variable CE_RUNTIMEENV_SITE = list("LCG_SC3"); }}} ''Note: if `CE_RUNTIMEENV` is defined in the site configuration template, this value will be used and must supply all the standard tags in addition to site-specific ones.'' === Working Area on Torque WNs === By default, QWG templates configure Torque client on WNs to define environment variable `TMPDIR` and location of `stdin`, `stdout` and `stderr` to a directory local to the worker node (`/var/spool/pbs/tmpdir`) and define environment variable `EDG_WL_SCRATCH` to `TMPDIR` (except for jobs requiring several WNs, e.g. MPI). This configuration is particularly adapted to shared home directories but works well with non shared home directories too. The main requirement is to appropriately size `/var` on the WNs as jobs sometimes require a large scratch area. On the other hand, `/home` is not required to be very large, as it should not store very large files for a long period. It is strongly recommended to use shared home directories, served through NFS or another distributed file system, as it optimizes `/home` usage and allows to dedicate local disk space on WNs to `/var`. If your configuration cannot be set as recommended or if you current configuration has a large space in /home and a limited space in /var, you can define the following property in your WN profiles before including `machine-types/wn` : {{{ variable TORQUE_TMPDIR = /home/pbs/tmpdir"; }}} === Restricting Access to CEs === It is possible to ban some users or restrict time slots when the CEs are open for grid usage using LCAS middleware component. QWG allows to easily [#LCAS-LCMAPS configure them]. === Home Directory Purging === A cron job is responsible for purging directories created for each job under the user home directory. By default, this job runs twice a week (on Sunday and Wednesday) and removes any file and directories older than 15 days in the home directory. This can be tuned with the following variables: * `CE_CLEANUP_ACCOUNTS_IDLE`: minimum age of a file (in days) for the file to be purged (Default: 15). * `CE_CLEANUP_ACCOUNTS_DAYS`: a comma-separated list of days in cron format (day number or first three letters of the day name) when to run the cron job (Default: Sunday, Wednesday). == WN Configuration == __Base template__ : * DPM : `machine-types/wn`. WN configuration is derived from CE and batch system configuration. To configure your WN for specific local requirements, use variable `WN_CONFIG_SITE`` which must be a template with all the specific actions required on your local nodes. === WN Profile Cloning === QWG templates support profile cloning, a feature known as ''dummy WN'' that allows to speed up dramatically compilation of WNs. This is based on the fact that all WNs generally share the same configuration information, except for the hardware description and some parameters like network configuration.... With profile cloning, instead of compiling separately all WNs (and generally rebuild all of them when one dependency was modified, only one profile, called the ''exact node'' and used as a reference profile, is really compiled. On the other WNs, even though the source profile looks the same, the compilation is not done but instead the reference profile is included in the WN profile and a very small part of the configuration is replayed to do the actual node customization. ''Note: disk partitioning and file system configuration are not replayed on each node. This means that the reference profile and the other nodes configured to use cloning must have a similar disk configuration.'' The main variable to enable profile cloning (currently supported only for gLite WN) is `USE_DUMMY`. It is `false` by default and must be set to `true` to enable profile cloning. This variable must be defined to `true` on all WNs, including the reference one (''exact node''). To use profile cloning, in additon to enable its use, you need to define a set of variables, generally in a common profile called by all WNs. This is generally done by creating a site-specific machine type for the WN (typically in `sites/xxx/machine-types/xxx/wn`, be sure not to overload standard `machine-types/wn`) that will do all the necessary initializations and include the standard `machine-types/wn`. The variables you need to define for profile cloning to work are: {{{ # Prefix of template names for all profiles. When using the old naming convention `profile_xxx`, define to `profile_` variable PROFILE_PREFIX ?= ''; # Name of the reference profile (string after PROFILE_PREFIX in its profile name) variable EXACT_NODE ?= 'grid100'; # Regexp (perl compatible) matching the node name part of profile names of eligible nodes variable NODE_REGEXP ?= 'grid.*'; # Variable pointing to some site-specific templates. Customize to match your configuration. variable SITE_DATABASES ?= 'site/databases'; variable GLOBAL_VARIABLES ?= 'site/global_variables'; variable SITE_FUNCTION ?= 'site/functions'; variable SITE_CONFIG ?= 'site/config'; variable FILESYSTEM_CONFIG_SITE ?= "filesystem/config"; variable GLITE_SITE_PARAMS ?= "site/glite/config"; }}} In addition to these variable definitions, another variable `WN_DUMMY_DISABLED` is available. This is a nlist where the key is an escaped node name and the value must be `true` to disable the use of profile cloning on a specific node. This allows to add `USE_DUMMY` variable the site-specific machine type definition for a WN, with a default value of `true`. And then, editing just one template (rather than editing each profile template individually), control the specific nodes where you want to disable the use of profile cloning. `WN_DUMMY_DISABLED` is typically defined in a site-specific template like `site/wn-cloning-config`, that is included in the site-specific definition of a WN. == SE Configuration == __Base template__ : * DPM : `machine-types/se_dpm`. * dCache : `machine-types/se_dCache`. ''Note : This section covers the generic SE configuration, not a specific implementation.'' === List of site SEs === The list of SEs available at your site must be defined in variable `SE_HOSTS`. This variable is a nlist with one entry for each local SE. The key is the SE host name and the value is a nlist defining SE parameters. Supported parameters for each SE are : * `type` : define SE implementation. Must be `SE_Classic`, `SE_dCache` or `SE_DPM`. This parameter is required and has no default. Note that SE Classic is deprecated. * `accessPoint` : define the root path of any VO-specific area on the SE. This parameter is required with Classic SE and dCache. It is optional with DPM where it defaults to `/dpm/dom.ain.name/homes`. * `arch` : used to define `GlueSEArchitecture` for the SE. This parameter is optional and defaults to `multidisk` that should be appropriate for standard configurations. For more details, look at [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl example] and comments in [source:/templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/defaults/glite.tpl gLite defaults]. ''Note : Format of `SE_HOSTS` has been changed in gLite-3.0.2-11 release of QWG templates. Look at [wiki:ReleaseNotes/gLite-3.0#gLite-3.0.2-11:SE_HOSTSformatchange release notes] to know how to migrate from previous format.'' === CE Close SEs === Variable `CE_CLOSE_SE_LIST` defines the SEs that must be registered in BDII as a close SE for the current CE. It can be either a value used for every VO or a nlist with a default value (key is `DEFAULT`) and one entry per VO with a different close SE (key is the VO name). Each value may be a string if there is only one close SE or a list of SEs. `CE_CLOSE_SE_LIST` defaults to deprecated `SE_HOST_DEFAULT` if defined, else to all the SEs defined in SE_HOSTS variable. It is valid to have no close SE defined. To remove default definition, you need to do : {{{ variable CE_CLOSE_SE_LIST = nlist('DEFAULT', undef); }}} It is valid for the close SE to be outside your site but this is probably not recommended for standard configurations. === Default SE === Variable `CE_DEFAULT_SE` is used to define the default SE for the site. It can be either a SE name or a nlist with a default entry (key is `DEFAULT`) and one entry per VO with a different default SE (key is the VO name). By default, if not explicitly defined, it defaults to the first SE in the appropriate CE_CLOSE_SE_LIST entry. The default SE can be outside your site (probably not recommended for standard configurations). == DPM Configuration == DPM-related standard templates require a site template to describe site/SE configuration for DPM. The variable `DPM_CONFIG_SITE` must contain the name of this template. This template defines the whole DPM configuration, including all disk servers used and is used to configure all the machines part of the DPM configuration. On DPM head node (in the node profile), variable `SEDPM_SRM_SERVER` must be defined to `true`. This variable is `false` by default (DPM disk servers). If you want to use Oracle version of DPM server define the following variable in your machine profile : {{{ variable DPM_SERVER_MYSQL = false; }}} === DPM site parameters === There is no default template provided for DPM configuration. To build your own template, you can look at template [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/pro_se_dpm_config.tpl pro_se_dpm_config.tpl] in examples provided with QWG templates. Starting with QWG Templates release gLite-3.0.2-9, there is no default password value provided for account used by DPM daemons and for the DB accounts used to access the DPM database. You '''must''' provide one in your site configuration. If you forget to do it, you'll get a not very explicit panc error : {{{ [pan-compile] *** wrong argument: operator + operand 1: not a property: element }}} If you want to use a specific VO list on your DPM server and you have several nodes in your DPM configuration (DPM head node + disk servers), you need to write a template defining `VOS` variable (with a non default value) and define variable `NODE_VO_CONFIG` to this template in the profile of DPM nodes (both head node and disk servers). === Using non-standard port numbers === It is possible to use non-standard port numbers for DPM daemons `dpm`, `dpns` and all SRM daemons. To do this, you need to define the `XXX_PORT` variable corresponding to the service in your gLite site parameters. Look at gLite [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/defaults/glite.tpl default parameters] to find the exact name of the variable. ''Note: this is not recommended to change the port number used by DPM services in normal circumstances.'' === Using a non-standard account name for dpmmgr === If you want to use an account name different from `dpmmgr` to run DPM daemons, you need to define variable `DPM_DAEMON_USER` in your site configuration template and provide a template to create this account, based on [source:templates/trunk/grid/gLite-3.0.0/users/dpmmgr.tpl users/dpmmgr.tpl]. == LFC Configuration == __Base template__ : `machine-types/lfc`. LFC related standard templates require a site template to describe the service site configuration. The variable `LFC_CONFIG_SITE` must contain the name of this template. If you want to use Oracle version of LFC server define the following variable in your machine profile : {{{ variable LFC_SERVER_MYSQL = false; }}} LFC templates allow a LFC server to act as a central LFC server (registered in BDII) for some VOs and as a local LFC server for the others. This are 2 variables controlling what is registered in the BDII : * `LFC_CENTRAL_VOS` : list of VOs for which the LFC server must be registered in BDII as a central server. Default is an empty list. * `LFC_LOCAL_VOS` : list all VOs for which the server must be registered in BDII as a local server. Default to all supported VOs (`VOS`variable). If a VO is in both lists, it is removed from `LFC_LOCAL_VOS`. If you don't want this server to be registered as a local server for any VO, even if configured on this node (present in `VOS` list), you must define this variable as an empty list : {{{ variable LFC_LOCAL_VOS = list(); }}} VOs listed in both lists must be present in `VOS` variable. These 2 variables have no impact on GSI (security) configuration and don't control access to the server. If you want to have `VOS` variable (controlling access to the server) matching the list of VOs supported by the LFC server (either as central or local catalogues), you can add the following definition to your LFC server profile : {{{ variable VOS = merge(LFC_CENTRAL_VOS, LFC_LOCAL_VOS); }}} === LFC site parameters === Normally the only thing really required in this site-specific template is the password for LFC user (by default `lfc`) and the DB accounts. Look at standard LFC [source:templates/trunk/glite-3.0.0/glite/lfc/config] configuration template for the syntax. Starting with QWG Templates release gLite-3.0.2-9, there is no default password value provided for account used by DPM daemons and for the DB accounts used to access the DPM database. You '''MUST''' provide one in your site configuration. If you forget to do it, you'll get a not very explicit panc error : {{{ [pan-compile] *** wrong argument: operator + operand 1: not a property: element }}} === LFC Alias === It is possible to configure a LFC server to register itself into the BDII using a DNS alias rather than the host name. To achieve this, you need to define in your site parameters a variable `LFC_HOSTS` (replacement for former `LFC_HOST`) which must be a nlist where keys are LFC server names and values are nlist accepting the following parameters : * `alias` : DNS alias to use to register this LFC server into the BDII === Using non-standard port numbers === It is possible to use non-standard port numbers for LFC daemons. To do this, you only need to define the `XXX_PORT` variable corresponding to the service. Look at gLite [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/defaults/glite.tpl default parameters] to find the exact name of the variable. ''Note: this is not recommended to change the port number used by LFC services in normal circumstances.'' === Using a non-standard account name for lfcmgr === If you want to use an account name different from `lfcmgr` to run LFC daemons, you need to define variable `DPM_USER` in your site configuration template and provide a template to create this account, based on [source:templates/trunk/grid/gLite-3.0.0/users/lfcmgr.tpl users/lfcmgr.tpl]. == WMS and LB == __Base templates__ : * `machine-types/wms` : a WMS only node. * `machine-types/lb` : a LB only node. * `machine-types/wmslb` : a combined WMS/LB node (not recommended). WMS and LB are 2 inter-related services : a complete WMS is made of at least one WMS and 1 LB. For scalability reasons, it is recommended to run WMS and LB on several machines : 1 LB should scale to 1M+ jobs per day where 1 WMS scales only to 20 Kjobs per day. Several WMS can share the same LB. Don't expect a combined WMS/LB to scale to more than 10 Kjobs/day. And be aware that a WMS needs a lot of memory: 4 GB is the required minimum. WMS and LB site-specific configuration is normally kept in one template, even if they run on several machines, to maintain consistency. Variable `WMS_CONFIG_SITE` must be defined to the name of this template, even for a LB. If you want to use a separate template to configure LB (not recommended), you can also use LB-specific variable, `LB_CONFIG_SITE`. List of VOs supported by WMS, if not your default list as defined in your [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl site-specific parameters], must be defined in another template that will be included very early in the configuration. Variable `NODE_VO_CONFIG` must be defined to the name of this template. This template generally contains only variable `VOS` definition. Main variables that need to be customized according to your WMS and LB configuration are : * `LB_MYSQL_ADMINPWD` : password of MySQL administrator account. There is no default, be sure to define to a non empty string. * `LB_TRUSTED_WMS` : a list of DN matching host DN of all WMS allowed to use this LB. May remain empty (default) on a combined WMS/LB. * `WMS_LB_SERVER_HOST` : define LB used by this WMS. Keep default value on a combined WMS/LB. In addition to these variables, there are several variables to tune performances of WMS, in particular its load monitor subsystem. Look at [source:templates/trunk/grid/glite-3.0.0/glite/wms/config.tpl glite/wms/config.tpl] and templates provided with `ncm-wmslb` component for a list of all available variables. The defaults should be appropriate; avoid modifying these variables without a clear reason to do so. In particular avoid setting too high thresholds as it may lead to WMS machine to be very much overloaded and service response time to be very bad. Most of the variables are related to the WM component of WMS. The main ones are: * `WMS_WM_EXPIRY_PERIOD` : maximum time in seconds to retry match making in case of failure to find a resource compatible with requirements. Default: 2 hours. * `WMS_WM_MATCH_RETRY_PERIOD` : Interval in seconds between 2 match making attempts. Must be less than `WMS_WM_EXPIRY_PERIOD`. Default : 30 mn. * `WMS_WM_BDII_FILTER_MAX_VOS` : maximum number of VOs configured on the WMS to define a LDAP filter when querying the BDII. Default: 10. * `WMS_WMPROXY_SDJ_REQUIREMENT` : match making requirement to add when `ShortDeadlineJob=true` in JDL. The same requirement is added negated for non SDJ jobs. Default should be appropriate (every queue whose name ends with `sdj`). === Load Monitor === WMS has an integrated feature to monitor load on the machine it runs on and refuse to accept new jobs if the load is higher than defined thresholds. Available variables to define threshold are : * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_CPU_LOAD1` : maximum CPU load averaged on 1 minute (as defined by `top` or `xload`). Default : 10. * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_CPU_LOAD5` : maximum CPU load averaged on 1 minute (as defined by `top` or `xload`). Default : 10. * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_CPU_LOAD15` : maximum CPU load averaged on 1 minute (as defined by `top` or `xload`). Default : 10. * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_DISK_USAGE` : maximum usage (in percent) of any file system present on the machine. Default : 95 (%). * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_FD_MIN` : minimum number of free file descriptors. Default : 500. * `WMS_LOAD_MONITOR_MEMORY_USAGE` : maximum usage (in percent) of virtual memory. Default : 95 (%). === Draining a WMS === It is sometimes desirable to drain a WMS. When draining a WMS doesn't accept any request to submit new jobs but continues to process already submitted jobs and accepts requests about job status or to cancel a job. With QWG, a WMS can be drain by defining in its profile the variable `WMS_DRAINED` to `true`. Undefining the variable reenable the WMS. Note that if you drain it manually and reconfigure the WMS with Quattor, it is re-enabled. === WMS Client Configuration === A few variables allow to configure default settings of WMS clients: * `WMS_OUTPUT_STORAGE_DEFAULT`: default directory where to put job outputs (one directory per job will be created in this directory). Default: `${HOME}/JobOutput`. == BDII == __Base template__ : `machine-types/bdii`. QWG Templates support configuration of all types of BDII : * Top-level BDII (default type) : use a central location to get their data (all BDIIs use the same source). This central location contains information about all sites registered in the GOC DB. Use of FCR (Freedom of Choice) enabled by default. * Site BDII : BDII in charge of collecting information about site resources. Support the concept of sub-site BDII (hierarchy of BDII to collect site information). * Resource BDII : used in replacement of Globus MDS to publish resource information into BDII. When configuring BDII on a machine, the following variables can be used (in the machine profile or in a site-specific template) to tune the configuration : * `BDII_TYPE` : can be `resource`, `site`, `top`. `top` is the default, except if deprecated variable `SITE_BDII` is true. * `BDII_SUBSITE` : name of the BDII sub-site. Ignored on any BDII type except `site`. Must be empty for the main site BDII (default) or defined to the sub-site name if this is a subsite BDII. * `BDII_SUBSITE_ONLY` (gLite 3.1 only) : if false, allow to run both subsite and site BDII on the same machine. Default : true. * `BDII_USE_FCR` : set to false to disable use of FCR (Freedom of Choice) on top-level BDII or to true to force its use on other BDII types. This value is ignored if BDII type is not `top`. Default is `true`. * `BDII_FCR_URL` : use a non-standard source for FCR. Starting with QWG templates [milestone:gLite-3.0.2-13 gLite-3.0.2-13], all machine types publishing information into BDII (almost all except WN, UI and disk servers) are using a BDII configured as a ''resource BDII'' for this purpose. In addition all these machine types can also be configured as a [#siteBDII site]/[#subsiteBDII subsite] BDII by defining appropriate variable into node profile (`BDII_TYPE='site'` and if applicable `BDII_SUBSITE`). ''Note : combined BDII used to be the default on LCG CE for backward compatibility but this is no longer the case. It is advised to run site BDII preferably on a dedicated machine. If this is not possible, choose any machine type but the CE as this machine can be very loaded and site BDII may become unresponsive with a lot of side effects.'' === Configuring BDII URLs on a site BDII === #siteBDII A site BDII aggregates information published by several other BDIIs, typically resource BDIIs or subsite BDIIs. List of resources to aggregate are specified by the variable `BDII_URLS`. This variable is typically defined in site parameters, [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl site/glite/config.tpl], and is ignored on all nodes except a site (or combined) BDII. Variable `BDII_URLS` is a nlist of URLs corresponding to the resource BDII endpoints (urls) aggregated on the site BDII. The key is an arbitrary name (like `CE`, `DPM1`...) but must be unique and the value is the endpoint. See [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl site configuration] example. '''Important: site, subsite and top-level BDIIs run a resource BDII that publishes information about themselves. They must be added to the `BDII_URLS` variable.''' ''__Restriction__ : each BDII in BDII hierarchy '''must''' use a different `mds-vo-name`. Thus it is not possible to use the `mds-vo-name` of a site BDII in `BDII_URLS` or this will be considered as a loop and the entry will be ignored.'' === Configuring a subsite BDII === #subsiteBDII It is possible to run a hierarchy of site BDII. This is particularly useful for a site made of several autonomous entities as it allows each subsite to export a unique access point to published subsite resources. Each subsite manages the actual configuration of its subsite BDII and all the subsites are then aggregated by the site BDII. GRIF site is an example of such a configuration. A subsite BDII is a site BDII where variable `BDII_SUBSITE` has been defined to a non empty value. This value is appended to site name to form the `mds-vo-name` for the subsite. When using an internal hierarchy of site and subsite BDIIs, `BDII_URLS` must be used for subsite BDIIs. To define the BDII endpoints that must be collected by the site BDII, you must use `BDII_URLS_SITE`. This allow both to coexist in the same site parameter template (typically [source:templates/trunk/sites/example/site/site/glite/config.tpl site/glite/config.tpl]) and both have the same syntax. `BDII_URLS_SITE` contains typically the endpoint of each resource BDII inside the site. When co-locating on the same machine a subsite BDII and a site BDII, this may lead to a problem with the `GlueSite` object: several objects could be published with a different DN, depending on the subsite BDII actually publishing it. This is particularly a problem if you run several subsite BDIIs also acting as a site BDII in different subsite as you will publish to the top BDII several different `GlueSite` object for your site. To solve this, it is possible to publish the `GlueSite` object in non-standard branch of the information tree, using the variable `SITE_GLUE_OBJECT_MDS_VO_NAME`. The value of this variable will be used instead of `resource`and thus the `GlueSite` object will be invisible on the resource BDII of the site BDII. To get the `GlueSite` object published by site BDII, it is necessary to add an entry in `BDII_URLS_SITE` for the ''active'' site BDII (using the DNS alias generally associated with the service) using the same `mds-vo-name` as specified in variable `SITE_GLUE_OBJECT_MDS_VO_NAME`. === Defining Top-level BDII === It is necessary to define the top-level BDII used by the site. This is done by variable `TOP_BDII_HOST`. This variable replaces deprecated `BDII_HOST`. It has no default. ''Note : this is a good practice to use a DNS alias as the top-level BDII name. This allows to change the actual top-level BDII without editing configuration. This has the advantage that the change is taken into account by running jobs (if there is no DNS caching on the WNs).'' === Configuring BDII alias === #BDIIAlias When several BDIIs are used to provide the same BDII service (either top or site) in order provide service load balancing and/or failover, they are generally all associated with a DNS alias (`CNAME`). In this configuration, the endpoint published for the BDII should be the alias instead of the BDII host name (default). This is done by one of the following variables, depending on whether the BDII is a site BDII or a top BDII: * `BDII_ALIAS_TOP`: DNS name to use in the top BDII endpoint. * `BDII_ALIAS_SITE`: DNS name to use in the site BDII endpoint. == MPI Support == To activate MPI support on the CE and WNs, you need to define variable `ENABLE_MPI` to `true` in your site parameters (normally `site/glite/config.tpl`). It is disabled by default. A default set of RPMs for various flavours of MPI (MPICH, MPICH2, OPENMPI, LAM) will be installed. If you would like to install a custom version of a particular MPI implementation, you can do so by defining the following variables: * MPI__VERSION : Version of the package (e.g. MPI_MPICH_VERSION = "1.0.4") * MPI__RELEASE : Release number of the package (e.g. MPI_MPICH_RELEASE = "1.sl3.cl.1") * MPI__EXTRAVERSION : Patch number of the package (if needed e.g. MPI_MPICH_EXTRAVERSION="p1") These variables ensure that the version published is consistent with the installed RPMs. == FTS Client == On machine types supporting it (e.g. UI, VOBOX, WN), you can configure a FTS client. Normally, to configure FTS client you only need to define variable `FTS_SERVER_HOST` to the name of your preferred FTS server (normally your ''closest T1''). To accommodate specific needs, there are 2 other variables whose default value should be appropriate : * `FTS_SERVER_PORT` : port number used by FTS server. Default : 8443. * `FTS_SERVER_TRANSFER_SERVICE_PATH : root path of transfer service on FTS server. This is used to build leftmost part of URLs related to FTS services. Default : `/glite-data-transfer-fts`. ''Note : for backward compatibility, this is still possible to directly define variable `FTS_SERVER_URL`, even though it is recommended to change your site parameters and use the new variables instead.'' == MonBox and APEL == __Base template__ : `machine-types/mon`. MonBox is the service in charge of storing local accounting. It is used in conjunction with APEL, the framework in charge of collecting accounting data on the CEs and publishing them into the central accounting. APEL is made of 2 parts: * the parser: in charge of parsing batch system and globus accounting/log files, producing the normalized grid accounting data and storing them into the MonBox database. Normally running on the CE, there is one parser by type of batch system. * the publisher: in charge of publishing the local accounting data stored on the MonBox into the grid central accounting. Normally runs on the MonBox. MonBox requires the following configuration variables: * `MON_MYSQL_PASSWORD`: password MySQL administrator (root) on MonBox. * `MON_HOST`: host name of MonBox. APEL configuration requires the following variables: * `APEL_ENABLED`: wheter to enable APEL. Default: `true`. * `APEL_DB_NAME`: APEL database name on MonBox. Default: `accounting`. * `APEL_DB_USER`: MySQL user to access APEL database on MonBox. Default: `accounting`. * `APEL_DB_PWD`: MySQL password to access APEL database on MonBox. By default, APEL publisher is run on MonBox. If you'd like to run it on another machine, add the following line in the machine profile: {{{ include { 'common/accounting/apel/publisher' }; }}} ''Note: even though APEL publisher is not run on a MonBox, it does require access to a MonBox.'' After the initial installation of the machine, you need to install a certificate on the machine as the usual location (`/etc/grid-security`), except if you use an installation (AII) hook to do it during the installation. After doing it you need to run again manually the Quattor configuration module `ncm-rgmaserver` or to reboot the machine. To run the configuration module, use the following command: {{{ ncm-ncd --configure rgmaserver }}} == MyProxy Server == __Base template__ : `machine-types/px`. MyProxy server configuration consists of defining policies for access to proxies stored on the server and their renewal. There are 2 sets of policiies : explicitly authorized policies and default policies. For each set a separate policy can be defined for: * renewers : list of clients able to renew a proxy. The variables to use are `MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_RENEWERS` and `MYPROXY_DEFAULT_RENEWERS`. * retrievers : list of clients able to retrieve a proxy it they have valid credentials and provide the same username/password as the one used at proxy creation. The variables to use are `MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_RETRIEVERS` and `MYPROXY_DEFAULT_RETRIEVERS`. * key retrievers : list of clients able to retrieve a proxy, including the private key, it they have valid credentials and provide the same username/password as the one used at proxy creation. The variables to use are `MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_KEY_RETRIEVERS` and `MYPROXY_DEFAULT_KEY_RETRIEVERS`. * trusted retrievers : list of clients able to retrieve a proxy without providing valid credentials (but providing the same username/password as the one used at proxy creation if one was used). The variables to use are `MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_TRUSTED_RETRIEVERS` and `MYPROXY_DEFAULT_TRUSTED_RETRIEVERS`. Clients listed in these variables are automatically added to the corresponding retrievers list (`MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_RETRIEVERS` or `MYPROXY_DEFAULT_RETRIEVERS`). The list values must be client DNs or regexp matching a client DN. Regexp must be used with caution as they may result in giving a broader access than wanted. For more information about the different policies and the regexp syntax, see the manpage for MyProxy server configuration: {{{ man myproxy-server.config }}} In addition to the previous variable, it is possible to use variable `GRID_TRUSTED_BROKERS` to define the WMS which are allowed to use the MyProxy server. The list provided with this variable is merged with `MYPROXY_AUTHORIZED_RENEWERS`. == VOMS Server == __Base template__ : `machine-types/voms`. VOMS server default configuration can be customized with the following variables: * `VOMS_VOS`: this variable describe each VO managed by the VOMS server. This is a nlist where the key is the VO name and the value a nlist specifiying the VO parameters. A typical entry is: {{{ 'vo.lal.in2p3.fr', nlist('port', '20000', 'host', 'grid12.lal.in2p3.fr', 'dbName', 'voms_lal', 'dbUser', 'root', 'dbPassword', 'clrtxtpwd', 'adminEmail', 'vomsadmins@example.com', 'adminCert', '/etc/grid-security/vomsadmin.pem', ), }}} * `VOMS_DB_TYPE`: can be `mysql` or `oracle`. * `VOMS_MYSQL_ADMINPWD`: password of the MySQL administrator account (MySQL account). Required if DB type is `mysql` (no default). * `VOMS_MYSQL_ADMINUSER`: username of the MySQL administrator account (MySQL account). Ignored if DB type is not `mysql`. Default: `root`. * `VOMS_ADMIN_SMTP_HOST`: SMTP host used by VOMS admin when sending emails. Default: `localhost`. * `VOMS_CRON_EMAIL`: user to notify in case of problems during cron jobs. Default: `root@localhost`. In addition to configuring the previous variable, it is generally necessary to install the certificate of the initial administrator of the VO. This certificate is passed in parameter `adminCert` in VO parameters (`VOMS_VOS`). This is typically done with Quattor configuration module `filecopy` in the site-specific configuration of the VOMS server. A typical sequence to do this is: {{{ include { 'components/filecopy/config' }; variable CONTENTS = <