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HP XC System Software: User's Guide > Chapter 1 Overview of the User EnvironmentSystem Architecture |
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The HP XC architecture is designed as a clustered system with single system traits. From a user perspective, this architecture achieves a single system view, providing capabilities such as the following:
The HP XC System Software enables the nodes in the platform to run cohesively to achieve a single system view. You can determine the version of the HP XC System Software from the /etc/hptc-release file.
The HP XC system is a high-performance compute cluster that runs HP XC Linux for High Performance Computing Version 1.0 (HPC Linux) as its software base. Any serial or thread-parallel applications, or applications built shared with HP-MPI that run correctly on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Advanced Server Version 3.0, also run correctly on HPC Linux. The HP XC System Software is available on several platforms. You can determine the platform by examining the top few fields of the /proc/cpuinfo file, for example, by using the head command:
Table 1-1 presents the representative output for each of the platforms. This output may differ according to changes in models and so on. Table 1-1 Determining the Node Platform
The HP XC system is implemented as a sea-of-nodes. Each node in the system contains the same software image on its local disk. There are two types of nodes in the system — a head node and client nodes.
The HP XC system allows for the specialization of client nodes to enable efficient and flexible distribution of the workload. Nodes can be assigned one or more specialized roles that determine how a particular node is used and what system services it provides. Of the many different roles that can be assigned to a client node, the following roles contain services that are of special interest to the general user:
The HP XC system supports both shared (global) and private (local) disks and file systems. Shared file systems can be mounted on all the other nodes by means of Lustre™ or NFS. This gives users a single view of all the shared data on disks attached to the HP XC system. SAN StorageThe HP XC system uses the HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share (HP StorageWorks SFS), which is based on Lustre technology and uses the Lustre File System from Cluster File Systems, Inc. This is a turnkey Lustre system from HP. It supplies access to Lustre file systems through Lustre client/server protocols over various system interconnects. The HP XC system is a client to the HP StorageWorks SFS server. Local StorageLocal storage for each node holds the operating system, a copy of the HP XC System Software, and temporary space that can be used by jobs running on the node. HP XC file systems are described in detail in “File System”. Each node of the HP XC system has its own local copy of all the HP XC System Software files including the Linux distribution; it also has its own local user files. Every node can also import files from NFS or Lustre file servers. HP XC System Software uses NFS 3, including both client and server functionality. HP XC System Software also enables Lustre client services for high-performance and high-availability file I/O. These Lustre client services require the separate installation of Lustre software, provided with the HP Storage Works Scalable File Share (SFS). NFS files can be shared exclusively among the nodes of the HP XC System or can be shared between the HP XC and external systems. External NFS files can be shared with any node having a direct external network connection. It is also possible to set up NFS to import external files to HP XC nodes without external network connections, by routing through a node with an external network connection. Your system administrator can choose to use either the HP XC administrative network or the HP XC system interconnect for NFS operations. The HP XC system interconnect can potentially offer higher performance, but only at the potential decrease in the performance of application communications. For high-performance or high-availability file I/O, the Lustre file system is available on HP XC. The Lustre file system uses POSIX-compliant syntax and semantics. The HP XC System Software includes kernel modifications required for Lustre client services which enables the operation of the separately installable Lustre client software. The Lustre file server product used on HP XC is the HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share (SFS), which fully supports the HP XC System Software. The SFS also includes HP XC Lustre client software. The SFS can be integrated with the HP XC so that Lustre I/O is performed over the same high-speed system interconnect fabric used by the HP XC. So, for example, if the HP XC system interconnect is based on a Quadrics® QsNet II® switch, then the SFS will serve files over ports on that switch. The file operations are able to proceed at the full bandwidth of the HP XC system interconnect because these operations are implemented directly over the low-level communications libraries. Further optimizations of file I/O can be achieved at the application level using special file system commands – implemented as ioctls – which allow a program to interrogate the attributes of the file system, modify the stripe size and other attributes of new (zero-length) files, and so on. Some of these optimizations are implicit in the HP-MPI I/O library, which implements the MPI-2 file I/O standard. File System LayoutIn an HP XC system, the basic file system layout is the same as that of the Red Hat Advanced Server 3.0 Linux file system. The HP XC file system is structured to separate cluster-specific files, base operating system files, and user-installed software files. This allows for flexibility and ease of potential upgrades of the system software and keeps software from conflicting with user installed software. Files are segregated into the following types and locations:
Be aware of the following information about the HP XC file system layout:
The HP XC system interconnect provides high-speed connectivity for parallel applications. The system interconnect network provides a high-speed communications path used primarily for user file service and for communications within user applications that are distributed among nodes of the system. The system interconnect network is a private network within the HP XC. Typically, every node in the HP XC is connected to the system interconnect. Table 1-2 indicates the types of system interconnects that are used on HP XC systems. Table 1-2 HP XC System Interconnects
Additional information on supported system interconnects is provided in the HP XC Hardware Preparation Guide. The HP XC system uses Network Address Translation (NAT) to enable nodes in the HP XC system that do not have direct external network connections to open outbound network connections to external network resources. |
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