Site Report Roberto Gomezel INFN October,18-22 2004

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Site Report Roberto Gomezel INFN October,18-22 2004

Outline of Presentation Computing Environment Security Services Network AFS BBS INFN Farms Tier 1 at CNAF October,18-22 2004 2

Computing Environment and security 95% of boxes are PCs running Linux or Windows Mac OS boxes keep on living Just a few commercial unix boxes only used for specific tasks or needs VPNs available in many sites Cisco boxes using IPsec NetScreen boxes using IPsec SSL VPNs are under evaluation The use of SSL eliminates the need of installing client software it enables instant access for users simply using a Web browser Network Security Dedicated Firewall machines just in a few sites Implemented with access lists on router connected to WAN INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 3

Desktop PCs running Linux and Windows Automatic installation using Kickstart for Linux and RIS for Windows Metaframe Citrix or Vmware used to reduce the need to install Windows OS on all PCs for desktop applications A few sites chose to outsource support for desktop environment due to lack of personnel INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 4

Backup Tape Libraries used: AIT2 – a few sites IBM Magstar – just used at LNF DLT, LTO – wide spread Backup tools: IBM Tivoli – quite used HP Omniback – quite used Atempo Time Navigator – just a few sites Domestic tool - widespread INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 5

Wireless LAN Access point running standard 802.11b,g All sites are using wireless connection as meeting or conferences are running Most of them use it to give connection to laptop computers Security issues: Permission based on Secure Port filtering (MAC Address) – poor security No encryption used Some sites are using 802.1X INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 6

E-mail Mail Transfer Agent Sendmail – widespread and more used (86%) Postfix – a few sites (14%) But there is an increasing number of sites planning to move from sendmail to postfix Hardware and OS 17% 17% 9% Alpha Solaris Intel/Linux Intel/BSD 57% INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 7

E-mail user agent All INFN sites provide an HTTP mail user agent One-third uses IMP One-third uses SQUIRREL Others: IMHO, Open WebMail, Cyrus Roxen Other mail user agents Pine, Internet Explorer, Mozilla INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 8

E-mail antivirus Amavis 18% None 32% Rav 27% Other 68% Sophos 9% Clamav Vexira 5% 9% None Rav Amavis Sophos Vexira Clamav INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 9

E-mail antispam 75% of INFN sites are using SPAM Assassin as tool to reduce junk e-mail Some sites use RAV or Sophos Just a few sites (5%) are using nothing An acl filter was set on port 25 in order to avoid that hosts not authorized can act as mail relay Only authorized mail relay are allowed to send and receive mail for a specific site INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 10

Security issues Monitored by GARR-CERT Goal by the end 2004: Incidents coming from INFN hosts (percentage) define a new policy for ACL setting Input filter: default deny services just on hosts checked very strictly Output filter: port 25 INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 11

INFN network LAN backbone network mainly based on Gigabit Ethernet Layer 2 and 3 switching No layer 4 switching The INFN WAN network is completely integrated into the GARR, nation-wide infrastructure, providing a backbone connectivity at 2.5 Gigabit POP typical access bandwidth for INFN sites: 34Mbps, 155 Mbps, Gigabit ethernet There is a trend to have a Gigabit Ethernet access in any site with a bandwidth management through rate limiting mechanism (CAR) according to the needs of the specific site INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 12

AFS INFN sites keep on using AFS services to share data and software throughout sites Most of local cells have completely moved server functionality to Linux boxes running OpenAFS software Authentication and file server functionalities of the nation-wide cell INFN.IT are running on Linux boxes with OpenAFS The migration of INFN.IT authentication servers from Kerberos IV to Kerberos V is expected to be accomplished by the end of the year INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 13

BBS - Bologna Batch System The Bologna Batch System (BBS) is a software tool that allows users from INFN Bologna to submit batch jobs to a set of well defined machines, from any INFN Bologna machines with Condor installed. Collaboration between the C. S. Dept., Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and the INFN Bologna. Main features of BBS: Any executable can be submitted to the system (scripts, compiled and linked programs, etc.). Two different 'queues' , short and long. Short and long jobs have a different priority (nice) when running on the same machine. Short jobs may run for no longer than an hour, but run at a higher priority. BBS tries to balance the load of the BBS CPUs. P.Mazzanti October,18-22 2004 14

BBS Presently the system consists of 16 2-CPU servers, Linux RedHat 9 and a single CPU machine. 7 machines are from ALICE experiment. BBS machines belong to the large INFN WAN Pool; they may be accessed from outside when no BBS job is running, while becoming IMMEDIATELY available when a BBS job asks to be run. Only short jobs will be accepted by the 7 ALICE machines if submitted non ALICE group user. P.Mazzanti October,18-22 2004 15

Aggregate jobs, daily Aggregate jobs, weekly P.Mazzanti October,18-22 2004 16

boi1.bo.infn.it daily Load boi1.bo.infn.it weekly Load P.Mazzanti October,18-22 2004 17

INFN Site Farm: a new challenge Some sites are planning to reconfigure and integrate computing facilities and local experimentspecific farm into a unique computing farm Introduction of SAN infrastructure to connect storage systems and computing units Reason: in order to avoid the increasing deployment of a lot of little and private farms for each single experiment in addition to the general purpose computing facility GFS file system is under evaluation as an efficient way of providing a cluster file sytem and volume manager Interesting because it is part of the SL3 distribution A lot of work for designing a mechanism to provide computing resources to different experiments according to their needs in a dynamic way We can learn from the experience coming from CNAF Tier1 and other Labs INFN Site Report – R.Gomezel October,18-22 2004 18

Hardware solutions for the Tier1 at CNAF Luca dell’Agnello Stefano Zani (INFN – CNAF, Italy) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 19

Tier1 INFN computing facility for HEP community Ending prototype phase last year, now fully operational Location: INFN-CNAF, Bologna (Italy) One of the main nodes on GARR network Personnel: 10 FTE’s 3 FTE's dedicated to experiments Multi-experiment LHC experiments(Alice, Atlas, CMS, LHCb), Virgo, CDF, BABAR, AMS, MAGIC, . Resources dynamically assigned to experiments according to their needs 50% of the Italian resource for LCG Participation to experiments data challenge Integrated with Italian Grid Resources accessible also in traditional way Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 20

Logistics Moved to a new location (last January) Hall in the basement (-2nd floor) 1000 m2 of total space Computing Nodes Storage Devices Electric Power System (UPS) Cooling and Air conditioning system Garr GPop Easily accessible with lorries from the road Not suitable for office use (remote control needed) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 21

Electric Power Electric Power Generator 1250 KVA ( 1000 KW) up to 160 racks Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) Located into a separate room (conditioned and ventilated) 800 KVA ( 640 KW) 380 V three-phase distributed to all racks (Blindo) Rack power controls output 3 independent 220 V lines for computers Rack power controls sustain burden up to 16 or 32 A 3 32 A power controls needed for Xeon 36 bi-processors racks APC power distribution modules (24 outlets each) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 22

Cooling & Air Conditioning RLS (Airwell) on the roof 700 KW Water cooling Need “booster pump” (20 mts T1 roof) Noise insulation 1 Air Conditioning Unit (uses 20% of RLS refreshing power and controls humidity) 12 Local Cooling Systems (Hiross) in the computing room Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 23

WN typical Rack Composition Power Controls (3U) 1 network switch (12U) 48 FE copper interfaces 2 GE fiber uplinks 34-36 1U WNs Connected to network switch via FE Connected to KVM system Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 24

control Paragon UTM8 (Raritan) 8 Analog (UTP/Fiber) output connections Supports up to 32 daisy chains of 40 nodes (UKVMSPD modules needed) Costs: 6 KEuro 125 Euro/server (UKVMSPD module) IP-reach (expansion to support IP transport) evaluted but not used Autoview 2000R (Avocent) 1 Analog 2 Digital (IP transport) output connections Supports connections up to 16 nodes Optional expansion to 16x8 nodes Compatible with Paragon (“gateway” to IP) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 25

Networking (1) Main Network infrastructure based on optical fibres ( 20 Km) To ease adoption of new (High Performances) transmission technologies To insure a better electrical insulation on long distances Local (Rack wide) links with UTP (copper) cables LAN has a “classical” star topology GE core switch (Enterasys ER16) NEW core switch (Black Diamond 10808 ) is in pre production 120 Gbit Fiber (Scale up to 480 ports) 12 10 Gbit Ethernet (Scale up to max 48 ports) Farms up-link via GE trunk (Channel) to core switch Disk Servers directly connected to GE switch (mainly fibre) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 26

Networking (2) WN's connected via FE to rack switch (1 switch per rack) Not a single brand for switches (as for wn's) 3 Extreme Summit 48 FE 2 GE ports 3 3550 Cisco 48 FE 2 GE ports 8 Enterasys 48 FE 2GE ports 10 switch Summit400 48 GE copper 2 GE ports (2x10Gb ready) Homogeneous characteristics 48 Copper Ethernet ports Support of main standards (e.g. 802.1q) 2 Gigabit up-links (optical fibers) to core switch CNAF interconnected to GARR-G backbone at 1 Gbps. Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 27

Network Configuration LHCBSW1 FarmSWG1 SAN AXUS F.C. FarmSW1 FarmSW2(Dell) Babar SW F.C. NAS4 DELL Infortrend 1st Floor F.C. F.C. NAS2 IBM FasT900 SSR8600 NAS3 NAS1 GARR Internal services 1 Gb/s FarmSW3(IBM) F.C. FarmSW4(IBM3) Catalyst3550 Disk Servers FarmSW5(3Com) FarmSWG2 F.C. STK 131.154.99.121 FarmSW6 FarmSW12 FarmSW7 FarmSW11 FarmSW8 T1 October,18-22 2004 FarmSW9 FarmSW10 28 S.Zani

L2 Configuration Each Experiment has its own VLAN Solution adopted for complete granularity Port based VLAN VLAN identifiers are propagated across switches (802.1q) Avoid recabling (or physical moving) of machines to change farm topology Level 2 isolation of farms Possibility to define multi-tag (Trunk) ports (for servers) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 29

Power Switches 2 models used at Tier1: “Old” APC MasterSwitch Control Unit AP9224 controlling 3x8 outlets 9222 PDU from 1 Ethernet “New” APC PDU Control Unit AP7951 controlling 24 outlets from 1 Ethernet “zero” Rack Unit (vertical mount) Access to the configuration/control menu via serial/telnet/web/snmp 1 Dedicated machine running APC Infrastruxure Manager Software (in progress) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 30

Remote Power Distribution Unit Screenshot of APC Infrastruxure Manager Software with the status of all TIER1 PDU Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 31

Computing units 800 1U rack-mountable Intel dual processor servers 800 MHz – 3.06 GHz 700 wn’s ( 1400 CPU’s) available for LCG Tendering: HPC farm with MPI Servers interconnected via Infiniband Opteron farm (near future) Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 32

Storage Resources 200 TB RAW Disk Space ON LINE. NAS NAS1 NAS4 (3Ware low cost) Tot 4.2 TB NAS2 NAS3 (Procom) Tot 13.2 TB SAN Dell Powervault 660f Tot 7TB Axus (Brownie) Tot 2TB STK Bladestore Tot 9 TB Infortrend ES A16F-R Tot 12 TB IBM Fast-T 900 Tot 150 TB Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 33

STORAGE resource CLIENT SIDE STK180 with 100 LTO (10Tbyte Native) CASTOR Server staging WAN or TIER1 LAN RAIDTEC 1800 Gbyte 2 SCSI interfaces IDE NAS1,NAS4 Nas4.cnaf.infn.it 1800 2000 Gbyte CDF LHCB STK L5500 robot (max 5000) 6 LTO-2 Fileserver CMS diskserv-cms-1 PROCOM NAS2 PROCOM NAS3 Nas2.cnaf.infn.it Nas3.cnaf.infn.it 8100 Gbyte 4700 Gbyte VIRGO ATLAS ALICE ATLAS FAIL-OVER support Gadzoox Slingshot FC Switch 18 port Fileserver Fcds2 Alias diskserv-ams-1 diskserv-atlas-1 Infortrend ES A16F-R 12 TB DELL POWERVAULT 7100 GByte 2 FC interface AXUS BROWIE Circa 2200 GByte 2 FC interface Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 STK BladeStore Circa 10000 GByte 4 FC interface 34

Storage management and accessaccessible (1) Tier1 storage resources as classical storage or via grid Non grid disk storage accessible via NFS Generic WN’s also have AFS client NFS mount volumes configured via autofs and ldap unique configuration repository eases maintenance in progress: integration of ldap configuration with Tier1 db data Scalability issues with NFS Experienced stalled mount points Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 35

Storage management and access (2) Part of disk storage used as front-end to CASTOR Balance between disk and CASTOR according to experiments needs 1 stager for each experiment (installation in progress) CASTOR accessible both directly or via grid CASTOR SE available ALICE Data Challenge used CASTOR architecture Feedback to CASTOR team Need optimization for file restaging Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 36

Tier1 Database Resource database and management interface Postgres database as back end Web interface (apache mod ssl php) Hw servers characteristics Sw servers configuration Servers allocation Possible direct access to db for some applications Monitoring system Nagios Interface to configure switches and interoperate with installation system. Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 37

Installation issues Centralized LCFG installation system (EDG WP4) Integration with a central Tier1 db Moving from a farm to another implies just changes in IP address (not name) Unique dhcp server for all VLANs Support for DDNS (cr.cnaf.infn.it) Investigating needs October,18-22 2004 Quattor for future Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani 38

Our Desired Solution for Resource Access SHARED RESOURCES among all experiments Priorities and reservations managed by the scheduler Most of Tier1 computing machines installed as LCG Worker Nodes, with light modifications to support more VOs Application Software not directly installed on WNs but accessed from outside (NFS, AFS, ) One or more Resource Manager to manage all the WNs in a centralized way Standard way to access Storage for each application Luca dell’Agnello -Stefano Zani October,18-22 2004 39

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