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Computing Home

Infrastructure Summary

The CSAIL network connects all locations in the research areas of the Stata Center with gigabit Ethernet at a density of one port per 25 square feet of office space, for a grand total of more than 4,000 gigabit networks ports. The network backbone is 10-gigabit Ethernet with a 30-gigabit aggregation connecting redundant backbone switches. CSAIL has aggregate outside connectivity of 1 Gbit/s.

The wireless network in the Stata Center consists of 72 Meraki MR14 access points operating at 300 Mbit/s with support for IEEE 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n standards, providing full coverage of all research areas of the building.

Currently, CSAIL has about 2,500 systems active on the network.

  • Storage summary (as of May 2011):
AFS
17 servers
44.9 TiB total space
32.5 TiB used
NFS - medium-speed
2 servers (zim and gir)
90.2 TiB total space
71.3 TiB used
NFS - high-speed
2 servers (phobos and nfs-prod-0)
about 170 TiB total space
about 150 TiB used

Most TIG provided network storage is backed up by default, though exceptions can be made by request. Nightly backups are kept for one week and then merged into weekly sets which in turn are kept for one month and merged into monthly sets. Monthly tapes are kept indefinitely though we only guarantee recovery for one year due to changing hardware and software environments (if you ask sweetly we can usually go back a bit further). Additionally AFS and the high-speed NFS have periodic snapshots that are kept online.

Network

Main page: NetworkTopics

We provide support for the data network throughout the entire Stata Center with the exception of the Student Street and certain areas below ground. This is very different from most of the rest of campus, which relies entirely on MITNet.

We provide DHCP throughout the network, except in areas where research groups have opted to run their own DHCP server. By default, every blue-colored data jack in offices and open lab areas is "live", meaning that it is connected to the network, enabled, and will provide an IP address, DNS server info, netmask, and other necessary information via DHCP.

There is no need to register or do anything other than just plug your computer in with an ethernet cable and make sure that your computer is configured to use DHCP. We can provide an ethernet cable if you don't have one; see "How do I Get Help?" below for more info. In the case of a wireless network card, you only need to associate with the "StataCenter" network. This means you can be up and running on the network in just seconds. (In order to print or use certain other services, you may need to register your wireless device.)

Email

Main page: EmailTopics

One of our most widely used services is our IMAP mail service. At your option, you may choose to have email that is sent to your CSAIL email address (@csail.mit.edu) delivered to our IMAP server, which has many features, including the following:

  • well-maintained spam filters
  • automated Bayesian spam/ham learning
  • virus filtering
  • easy-to-use server side custom filters
  • vacation auto-responders
  • webmail access from any browser

Web/Database

Main page: WebServices

We provide website virtual hosting for individuals via people.csail.mit.edu, and research project hosting at hostnames that you can specify. Our virtual hosting servers include support for most popular web site tools, like PHP and MySQL. If you need a service that we don't currently offer, just ask; it may already be in the works, but if not, we'll do our best to accommodate your request.

Authentication

Main page: AccountsAndSecurity

The CSAIL computing infrastructure uses Kerberos V5 at the core for authentication. Each user should apply for a CSAIL "Kerberos Principal", which is a strong authentication credential that is built upon cryptographic techniques. Think of it as your passport to all of the computing and information services CSAIL has to offer.

File Service

Main page: FileSystemsAndBackups

Kerberos works in conjunction with AFS, which is an authenticated, global network filesystem (as opposed to unauthenticated file systems like NFS) to provide a high degree of fault tolerant, globally available file service that has a much more robust access control model than standard UNIX permission modes. You can even create your own user groups, without sysadmin intervention, and assign those groups specialized privileges to your files. AFS also has a built-in recovery feature called "snapshots" that allows you to quickly restore a file that you've mistakenly deleted.

Additionally, we do provide NFS and SMB volumes for groups that have needs that are not addressed by AFS, such as high-performance computing. We encourage you to use AFS for the majority of your storage needs, however.

Software

Main page: SoftwareTopics

We have site license agreements for many commonly used software packages, including Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office, Adobe Acrobat, Matlab, and many others. We can provide you with media and license keys, as well as installation support if your research group doesn't have their own system administrator. For more information on what TIG has available, go to CSAIL's Software Distribution Center.

We also provide mirrors of a number of popular Free and Open Source software projects.

Audio Video

Main page: AudioVideo

Printing Topics

Main page: PrintingTopics

This page provides information on how to configure your computer to use the CSAIL printing infrastructure. Print spooling is handled by a software package called CUPS, which runs on the CSAIL print spooler. Printing service is available for just about any operating system, since CUPS is backward-compatible with LPR (an older UNIX printing system), and all printers are available via Microsoft Windows printer sharing.

Email TIG or stop by 32-268 if you experience any problems with our printing services; that is, print job spooling, client configuration issues, printer jams, toner, paper, or other physical issues with printers.

Operating Systems Support

Main page: OperatingSystemsSupport

What we don't go into there is that we can extend our deployment and configuration management systems to provide groups with somewhat customized version of our standard Linux distro for desktop and or server use (and possibly different customizations for different sets of servers)

OpenStack Private Cloud

Main Page: OpenStack

OpenStack is a free and open software suite for providing Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) both for private clouds like we're implementing and large public clouds like Rackspace. We are currently using "Nova" compute services, "Cinder" volume service, and "Glance" image management and "Quantum" (aka "Neutron" in next release) networking service. We are currently using the "Grizzly" release (aka 2013.1 released March 2013) on Ubuntu 12.04LTS "Precise" with KVM as the virtualization layer.

The next upstream release "Havana" is scheduled for 17 October 2013. We are currently using a number of back ported features from this release and will likely update our site very soon after the official release.

We are running on hardware donated by Quanta Computer with a total of 768 physical cores using Intel Xeon L5640 2.27GHz chips (this presents as 1536 virtual cores) and over 3 Terabytes of RAM. This is delivered in 64 dual-socket hex-core systems ( 12 physical cores presenting as 24vCPUs) 56 of which have 48G of RAM with the remaining 8 having 96G of RAM each.

-- JonProulx - 28 Aug 2013

Virtual Machines For Research Groups

Main Page: VirtualMachinesForResearchGroups

Note over the course of the 2013 academic year this service will be merged into the OpenStack system described above.

TIG provides hosting of virtual machines to allow CSAIL research groups to execute specific research-related tasks, such as specialized or high-load web hosting that's inappropriate for standard TIG-provided WebServices. Generally these virtual machines are used for persistent, public-facing tasks.

Cluster Computing

Main Page: ClusterComputing

If your group is planning on purchasing dedicated compute resources please contact help@csail.mit.edu to see if your needs would be better served by buying into our cluster system.

TIG has built out a flexible, reconfigurable compute clustering environment which is able to serve both as a lab wide batch queued cluster based on Condor[1] and also host private or priority access nodes for groups who purchase dedicated hardware. The short initial proposal(PDF format) was made in August 2006 after a period of testing various cluster options.

venn.png

The design, illustrated above, allows the integration or separation of three main components: the queuing systems, the virtualization system, and existing physical servers. The intersections show the areas discussed in this document. The non-intersecting areas suggest the possibilities outside the scope of this document, most notably the existing private group compute resources in their current stand-alone configuration, the possibility of virtualizing infrastructural services, and the possibility of incorporationg workstation idle cycle harvesting into the queing system.

-- JonProulx - 08 Aug 2007

[1] http://www.cs.wisc.edu/condor/

Tools

TIG develops and maintains various custom productivity tools, such a:

  • Peeps: The HQ personnel database
  • The RA Tool: Used by PIs, PI staff, Fiscal, and HR for setting up Graduate Student Appointments
  • XMAP

-- Main.achen0 - 14 Aug 2012
Topic revision: 29 Aug 2013, JonProulx
 

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