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This page will guide you through your first Omni experiment. Omni is a command line tool that helps you interact with GENI aggregate managers. The only thing you will need is a GENI account. If you don't already have one, sign up!
1. Configure Omni with your GENI account
Omni is a command-line tool that will help you reserve resources in GENI. Follow these steps to download and configure Omni.
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- Verify that you have the necessary credential and key files . Run:
ls ~/.ssh ~/.ssl
The output looks like :geni@geni-vm:~$ ls ~/.ssh ~/.ssl /home/geni/.ssh: config geni_key geni_key.pub /home/geni/.ssl: geni_cert_enc.pem geni_cert.pem
geni_cert.pem Cleartext certificate, i.e. does not require any passphrase geni_cert_enc.pem Encrypted certificate geni_key The private key that you will use to login to the nodes geni_key.pub The corresponding public key that will be uploaded to the nodes Note: Depending on the setup of your host you might see more files than the ones listed above.
- Optional - Look around the omni_config file
Open the file
~/.gcf/omni_config
using either vim or emacs. Close to the top of the file you will see two parameters calleddefault_cf
andusers
. Your username should be at least listed in the user section. Look for the sections in the file that are named[pg]
and[<username>]
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In the
[<username>]
section, the information need for logging-in to reserved compute resources are provided. It includes your unique user URN and a public key that would be uploaded to the hosts that you reserve.
In the
[pg]
section you configure Omni to use your personal information. The cert and the key attribute point to files that we have manually downloaded from pgeni.gpolab.bbn.com. This is equivalent to the Download action of Flack.
Another interesting section to look at is the
[aggregate-nicknames]
sections. Flack already knows the URL for all the AMs and present you a list of AMs to choose from using a short, descriptive name. In Omni a user is required to pass the URL for each call to the GENI AM API. In this section the user gets a chance to provide short descriptive names to the URLs that are easier to memorize and use.
2. Launch your experiment
Now that you have configured Omni we are ready to design our experiment, which going over most of the Omni commands.
- Create a slice. The first thing to do when preparing to run a GENI experiment is to create a slice. Name your slice something like xxxomni (where xxx are your initials). Your slicename in general should be something memorable but not your username. Type:
omni.py createslice <slicename>
- Verify that your slice was created. Use the
listmyslices
command, of omni:omni.py listmyslices <username>
- Renew your slice. To extend the lifetime of your slice. Type:
omni.py renewslice <slicename> <YYYYMMDD>
The slice lifetime is typically short and when your slice expires, all reserved resources at the time are also released. Note: your resources might have a shorter lifetime than your slice. - See available resources. For this experiment we are going to use the Aggregate manager at NYSERNet. In order to see what each AM offers you can use the
listresources
command. Type:omni.py listresources -a nysernet-ig -o
The-o
option will save the output to a file. The filename is chosen by Omni and printed as part of the output. The output will look like :geni@geni-VirtualBox:~$ omni.py listresources -a nysernet-ig -o INFO:omni:Loading config file /home/geni/.gcf/omni_config INFO:omni:Using control framework pg INFO:omni:Saving output to a file. INFO:omni:Substituting AM nickname nysernet-ig with URL https://www.emulab.net:12369/protogeni/xmlrpc/am/2.0, URN unspecified_AM_URN INFO:omni:Listed resources on 1 out of 1 possible aggregates. INFO:omni:Writing to 'rspec-www-emulab-net-protogeniv2.xml' INFO:omni: ------------------------------------------------------------ INFO:omni: Completed listresources: Options as run: aggregate: ['nysernet-ig'] framework: pg output: True Args: listresources Result Summary: Queried resources from 1 of 1 aggregate(s). Wrote rspecs from 1 aggregate(s) to 1 file(s) Saved listresources RSpec at 'unspecified_AM_URN' (url 'https://www.emulab.net:12369/protogeni/xmlrpc/am/2.0') to file rspec-www-emulab-net-protogeniv2.xml; INFO:omni: ============================================================
In the last line of the output Omni will tell you the name of the file that output is saved at. In the example above this would berspec-www-emulab-net-protogeniv2.xml
. This file is a Resource SPECification document(RSpec), and in particular an advertisement rspec. Open the file that Omni saved and just take a look to see how an advertisement RSpec looks like. In order to see only available resources type:omni.py listresources -a nysernet-ig --available -o
- Reserve resources. To be able to reserve resources you will need to craft a request rspec. For this example we have created the rspec and post it on the web for you to use. If you want to take a look to the rspec itself, you can directly visit the rspec URL. Type:
omni.py createsliver -a nysernet-ig <slicename> http://www.gpolab.bbn.com/exp/HelloGENI/hellogeni.rspec
- See the reserved resources. You can use the
listresources
command, to see what resources are reserved at an Aggregate.omni.py listresources -a nysernet-ig <slicename>
- Optional- Extend the lifetime of your reservation. The lifetime of your reservation can never exceed the lifetime of your slice and is usually set to a default value. For the purpose of this exercise you don't need to renew your reservation. Note After reserving your resources, renewing your slice will not automatically renew your slivers, so you will have to manually renew them if you decide you need them longer. If you wanted to do this, the command would look like:
omni.py renewsliver -a nysernet-ig <slicename> <YYYYMMDD>
- Check the status of your resources. Type:
omni.py sliverstatus -a nysernet-ig <slicename>
Thesliverstatus
command reports the status of each individual resource that you reserved as well as the status of your overall GENI sliver. The status reported usually reflects the status of your resource, for example if you hav reserved a host, then statusready
means that the host is booted and ready, i.e. you can login to it. When the status isready
for the whole sliver, in the summary of the output there will be something like:... has overall SliverStatus: ready...
When you see this you are ready to continue to the next step.
3. View your results
For this example experiment we used the install script facility to automatically install the necessary software and kick-off the experiment. In this very simple setup, we have installed and launched a web server as well as an iperf server, on the server host. On the client, we have started some processes to test both of these services. To view the results of this experiment:
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pcxxx.emulab.net ).
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- Optional: Manually generate traffic While conducting experiments in GENI, you will often want to run commands directly on the nodes. In this optional step, you will log in to a node and issue commands directly to it.
- Follow these instructions and log in to the client node. You can also simply copy and paste the command as it was printed in the
readyToLogin
output. - When you have successfully logged in, run this command
iperf -c server -P 2
This task shouldn't take more than 30 seconds. Change the number after the-P
argument and watch how the performance is affected while you change the number of parallel TCP connections. - Scroll all the way down the server iperf log, and look at the logs for your transfers
- Follow these instructions and log in to the client node. You can also simply copy and paste the command as it was printed in the
4. Cleanup
After you are done with your experiment, you should always release your resources so that other experimenters can use the resources.
- In the terminal, where you have been running your omni commands do:
omni.py deletesliver -a nysernet-ig <slicename>