I agree with Tim. 

We are finishing up an Ansible install and it has worked well for us. 

Initially, we used it internally to help standardize our cluster builds, but is 
has many more uses. We recently used it to provision a VM that we saved off and 
uploaded to Amazon for building an AMI. You can also use it to change 
attributes on your running systems. I have used at Cobler in the past and it 
works well, too. I just find Ansible to be a little easier. 

Good luck, 
Craig 

Craig Andrew 
Manager of Systems Administration 
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research 


From: "Tim Cutts" <t...@sanger.ac.uk> 
To: "Mikhail Kuzminsky" <mikk...@mail.ru>, beowulf@beowulf.org 
Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2016 10:46:41 AM 
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] more automatic building 



Any number of approaches will work. When I used to do this years ago (I've long 
since passed on the technical side) I'd PXE boot, partition the hard disk and 
set up a provisioning network and base OS install using the Debian FAI (Fully 
Automated Install) system, and then use cfengine to configure the machine once 
it had come in that minimal state. This approach was used across the board for 
all of our Linux boxes, from Linux desktops to database servers to HPC compute 
nodes. 



These days the team uses tools like cobbler and ansible to achieve the same 
thing. There are lots of ways to do it, but the principle is the same. 



Tim 




-- 


Head of Scientific Computing 


Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute 




On 28/09/2016, 15:34, "Beowulf on behalf of Mikhail Kuzminsky" < 
beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org on behalf of mikk...@mail.ru > wrote: 








I worked always w/very small HPC clusters and built them manually (each 
server). 
But what is reasonable to do for clusters containing some tens or hundred of 
nodes ? 
Of course w/modern Xeon (or Xeon Phi KNL) and IB EDR, during the next year for 
example. 
There are some automatic systems like OSCAR or even ROCKS. 

But it looks that ROCKS don't support modern interconnects, and there may be 
problems 
w/OSCAR versions for support of systemd-based distributives like CentOS 7. For 
next year - 
is it reasonable to wait new OSCAR version or something else ? 

Mikhail Kuzminsky, 
Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry RAS, 
Moscow 





-- The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute is operated by Genome Research Limited, 
a charity registered in England with number 1021457 and a company registered in 
England with number 2742969, whose registered office is 215 Euston Road, 
London, NW1 2BE. 
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