24 June 2009

GridPP DPM toolkit v2.3.9 released

Ladies and gentlemen,

I am proud to announce the release of the gridpp-dpm-tools package,
version 2.3.9.
It is available at the usual place:
http://www.sysadmin.hep.ac.uk/rpms/fabric-management/RPMS.storage/gridpp-dpm-tools-2.3.9-6.noarch.rpm

This version is an extra-special "GridPP Milestone" release, in that
it includes a mechanism for writing user-level storage consumption
data to a database, so that you can make nice graphs of them later.
(The graphmaking functionality exists as scripts now, and will be
released as a modification to the dpm monitoring rpm as soon as I make
the necessary changes + package it.)
You can enable user-level accounting on your DPM by following the
instructions just newly added to the GridPP wiki for the toolkit. (
http://www.gridpp.ac.uk/wiki/DPM-admin-tools#Installation )

Comments, bug reports, &c all (happily?) accepted. In particular, if
the user-level accounting doesn't work for you, I'd like to know about
it, since it's been happy here at Glasgow for the last couple of days.

23 June 2009

Workshop agenda now available

As the title indicates, the agenda for the GridPP storage workshop is now uploaded to the web site, along with the agenda for hepsysman.

15 June 2009

Storage workshop planning

With now less than 0.05 years to go before the storage workshop, the agenda and other planning is continuing apace.
We would like to ask sites to give site reports (currently 20 mins each, incl. Qs) about their (own) storage infrastructure: we'd like to hear about their storage setup (as opposed to computing and other irrelevant stuff :-P) as well as their STEP experiences. This is partly so we can discuss the implications, but also for the benefit of folks who will be attending the storage workshop only. We will get feedback from ATLAS on STEP, ie the users' perspective.
Brian will present our experiences with BeStMan and Hadoop; there will be an introduction to the storage schema, to the DPM toolkit, to SRM testing, to user level accounting, and from the Tier 1 a talk on disk arrays scheduling, and hopefully room for discussion. So lots of things to look forward to!

08 June 2009

GridPP DPM toolkit v2.3.6 released

This is a bug-fix release for 2.3.5, which had some annoying whitespace inconsistencies introduced into the dpm-sql* functions. Thanks to Stephen Childs for noticing them.

(The direct link for download is:
http://www.sysadmin.hep.ac.uk/rpms/fabric-management/RPMS.storage/gridpp-dpm-tools-2.3.6-5.noarch.rpm
and the documentation is still at
https://www.gridpp.ac.uk/wiki/DPM-admin-tools
and has been slightly updated for this release.)

02 June 2009

SRM protocol status

The Grid Storage Management working group (GSM-WG) in OGF exists to standardise the SRM protocol. Why standardise? We need this to ensure the process stays open, and can benefit other communities than WLCG.
The SRM document is GFD.129, and we now have an experiences document available for public comments. You are invited to read this document and submit your comments - thanks!
You can even do so anonymously!

01 June 2009

Summary of DESY workshop

Getting the SRM implementers back together was very useful, and long overdue. We agreed of course to not change anything :-)
  • We needed to review how WLCG clients make use of the protocol; there are cases where they do not make the most efficient use of the protocol, thus causing a high load on the server. Is the estimated wait time used properly?
  • Differences between implementations may need documenting, e.g. whether an implementation supports "hard" pinning.
  • We reviewed the implementations' support for areas of the protocol, whether it was fully or partially supported (or not at all), to find a "core" which MUST be universally supported, and whether the implementers thought the feature desirable, given their specialist knowledge of the underlying storage system.
  • Security and the use of proxies were discussed.
There was one person who was involved with SNIA, and users from WLCG.
This is the summary, for the full report attend the next GridPP storage meeting.