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Subsections


3.14 Virtual Machines

Virtual machines can be executed on any execution site with VMware, Xen (via libvirt), or KVM. To do this, Condor must be informed of some details of the virtual machine installation, and the execution machines must be configured correctly. This permits the execution of vm universe jobs.

What follows is not a comprehensive list of the options that help set up to use the vm universe; rather, it is intended to serve as a starting point for those users interested in getting vm universe jobs up and running quickly. Details of configuration variables are in section 3.3.28.

Begin by installing the virtualization package on all execute machines, according to the vendor's instructions. We have successfully used VMware Server, Xen, and KVM. If considering running on a Windows system, a Perl distribution will also need to be installed; we have successfully used ActivePerl.

For VMware, VMware Server 1 must be installed and running on the execute machine.

For Xen, there are three things that must exist on an execute machine to fully support vm universe jobs.

  1. A Xen-enabled kernel must be running. This running Xen kernel acts as Dom0, in Xen terminology, under which all VMs are started, called DomUs Xen terminology.

  2. The libvirtd daemon must be available, and Xend services must be running.

  3. The pygrub program must be available, for execution of VMs whose disks contain the kernel they will run.

For KVM, there are two things that must exist on an execute machine to fully support vm universe jobs.

  1. The machine must have the KVM kernel module installed and running.

  2. The libvirtd daemon must be installed and running.

3.14.1 Configuration Variables

There are configuration variables related to the virtual machines for vm universe jobs. Some options are required, while others are optional. Here we only discuss those that are required.

First, the type of virtual machine that is installed on the execute machine must be specified. For now, only one type can be utilized per machine. For instance, the following tells Condor to use VMware:

VM_TYPE = vmware

The location of the condor_vm-gahp and its log file must also be specified on the execute machine. On a Windows installation, these options would look like this:

VM_GAHP_SERVER = $(SBIN)/condor_vm-gahp.exe
VM_GAHP_LOG = $(LOG)/VMGahpLog

3.14.1.1 VMware-Specific Configuration

To use VMware, identify the location of the Perl executable on the execute machine. In most cases, the default value should suffice:

VMWARE_PERL = perl

This, of course, assumes the Perl executable is in the path of the condor_master daemon. If this is not the case, then a full path to the Perl executable will be required.

The final required configuration is the location of the VMware control script used by the condor_vm-gahp on the execute machine to talk to the virtual machine hypervisor. It is located in Condor's sbin directory:

VMWARE_SCRIPT = $(SBIN)/condor_vm_vmware

Note that an execute machine's EXECUTE variable should not contain any symbolic links in its path, if the machine is configured to run VMware vm universe jobs. See the FAQ entry in section 7.3 for details.

3.14.1.2 Xen-Specific and KVM-Specific Configuration

Once the configuration options have been set, restart the condor_startd daemon on that host. For example:

> condor_restart -startd leovinus

The condor_startd daemon takes a few moments to exercise the VM capabilities of the condor_vm-gahp, query its properties, and then advertise the machine to the pool as VM-capable. If the set up succeeded, then condor_status will reveal that the host is now VM-capable by printing the VM type and the version number:

> condor_status -vm leovinus

After a suitable amount of time, if this command does not give any output, then the condor_vm-gahp is having difficulty executing the VM software. The exact cause of the problem depends on the details of the VM, the local installation, and a variety of other factors. We can offer only limited advice on these matters:

For Xen and KVM, the vm universe is only available when root starts Condor. This is a restriction currently imposed because root privileges are required to create a virtual machine on top of a Xen-enabled kernel. Specifically, root is needed to properly use the libvirt utility that controls creation and management of Xen and KVM guest virtual machines. This restriction may be lifted in future versions, depending on features provided by the underlying tool libvirt.


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