Research Computing At Haas
Haas research computing for PhD students currently consists of bear and phd-pgsql. This pages details these resources.
Contents
Bear
Bear is a 12 node research computing cluster. The official blurb says that bear has two sets of 5 compute nodes, one set with 64Gb of RAM per node, and one with 16Gb of RAM per node. Nodes have dual core 3Ghz Xenon processors.
There are three ways of using bear:
Storing Data on Bear
Your "R" drive lives on bear. We tested access times to the R drive and found that they are much faster than to HCS-Data or other shares that you have access to (other than your C drive, though the speeds are actually comparable with those to C). You should use R:\bulk as your primary data storage area.
If your R drive isn't mapped already then map a network drive to:
\\bear\username$
SSH'ing into Bear
You can use a copy of PuTTy to SSH onto bear. PuTTY is a free SSH client that you can download from its author. You don not need to 'install' it - it is a standalone executable file. Details for the configuration are available from the howdoi section of the haas website, but none is really needed.
The address to connect to bear is:
bear.haas.berkeley.edu
And the connection is on the standard port (22). You can set your username under:
Connection -> Data -> Auto-login Username
And save the connection settings if you want.
If you are running scripts then you should use the bsub to have them execute on the compute nodes, rather than the login node, as otherwise a runaway script can bring the entire of bear to a stand still. An example syntax for running a perl script is:
bsub -Is "perl Script.pl"
Available scripting languages include:
- Perl
- Python
- R
There are also (apparently - I haven't tested them) compilers for:
- C++ (GNU Cpp)
- Fortran 77
To see your files you might want the following simple commands:
- ls -alt - list the files in the current directory in all their glory
- cd bulk - change into the bulk directory
- cd .. - change up a directory
Using Xwindow Applications on Bear
There are copies of the following Xwindow applications ready for use on bear:
- Matlab (matlab)
- Stata (xstata)
- Stata-SE (xstata-se)
- SAS (sas)
To use these applications you need an Xwindows client. The eXceed client is available from available from software.berkeley.edu for download here. Download it and install it. You can accept a typical installation for just one user. There is a very old set-up guide from HCS that may be useful, but the details below should suffice.
Now save a bear configuration in PuTTy by entering the following parameters and hitting "Save":
Session -> Host Name (or IP address) bear.haas.berkeley.edu Connection -> Data -> Auto-login Username Your_Username Connection -> Data -> SSH -> Encryption Cipher Move Blowfish to the top Connection -> Data -> SSH -> X11 -> Enable X11 Fowarding Tick the box Session -> Saved Sessions Bear + Click Save
Now start eXceed running (and leave it running in the background) and SSH onto bear using Putty. At the command line type the name of the program, for example "xstata-se", and the program will launch in an eXceed window on your desktop. Voila!
For example my terminal looked like this to launch STATA-SE:
[ed_egan@bear-b ~]$ xstata-se
There is a Best Practises blurb from HCS regarding these apps that specifically asks us not to background our processes using "&". That is do not type: xstata-se &
If no licenses are available then you should be able to see who is running other copies (so you know who to complain about) by using the command:
bjobs -u all
Remember - Bear is your R drive, so the root of bear, when you login, is the root of your R drive!
PhD-PGSQL
phd-pgsql is a new and experimental database server for PhD students and faculty. It hosts a copy of PostgreSQL with support for R, Perl and C++ scripting inside of the RDMS. At present the server is being deployed. More news will be available here shortly!