Overview
A virtualized cluster service is an abstraction of a compute service that corresponds to a platform of physical resources on which Virtual Machine (VM) instances can be created. A virtualized cluster service is very similar to a a cloud service, the only difference being that the former exposes the underlying physical resources, while the latter does not. More specifically, it is possible to instantiate a VM on a particular physical host, and to migrate a VM between two physical hosts.
Creating a virtualized cluster compute service
In WRENCH, a virtualized cluster service is defined by the wrench::VirtualizedClusterComputeService class. An instantiation of a virtualized cluster service requires the following parameters:
- The name of a host on which to start the service;
- A list (
std::vector
) of hostnames (all cores and all RAM of each host is available to the virtualized cluster service); - A mount point (corresponding to a disk attached to the host) for the scratch space, i.e., storage local to the virtualized cluster service (used to store workflow files, as needed, during job executions); and
- Maps (
std::map
) of configurable properties (wrench::VirtualizedClusterComputeServiceProperty
) and configurable message payloads (wrench::VirtualizedClusterComputeServiceMessagePayload
).
The example below creates an instance of a virtualized cluster service that runs on host vc_gateway
, provides access to 4 execution hosts, and has a scratch space on the disk mounted at path /scratch
at host vc_gateway
. Furthermore, the VM boot time is configured to be 10 second, and the message with which the service answers resource description requests is configured to be 1KiB:
See the documentation of wrench::VirtualizedClusterComputeServiceProperty
and wrench::VirtualizedClusterComputeServiceMessagePayload
for all possible configuration options.
Also see the simulators in the examples/basic-examples/virtualized-cluster-*/
directories, which use virtualized cluster services.