perfSONAR combines various sets of measurement tools and services. For perfSONAR 4.4 we provide the whole perfSONAR toolkit as Debian packages for six different architectures. This should enable you to deploy a full perfSONAR node on one of the following distributions:
- Debian 9 Stretch
- Ubuntu 18 Bionic Beaver
Partial support of perfSONAR, i.e. only perfsonar-testpoint
bundle at the moment, is also available on the following distributions:
- Debian 10 Buster
Debian meta packages are available to install the bundles described in :doc:`install_options`. The remaining sections of this document detail the steps required for installing these bundles.
- Architecture: We provide Debian packages for 6 different architectures:
- 32-bit (i386)
- 64-bit (amd64)
- ARMv4t and up (armel) (only for Debian)
- ARMv7 and up (armhf)
- ARM64 (arm64)
- PPC64 (ppc64el)
- Operating System: Any system running a Debian 9 or Ubuntu 18 server OS is supported. Other Debian flavours derived from Debian 9 or Ubuntu 18 might work too but are not officially supported.
- See :doc:`install_hardware` for hardware requirements and more.
Note
Installing a graphical/desktop environment with perfSONAR is not supported. These environments generally come with a Network Manager that conflicts with the way that perfSONAR is tuning the network interface parameters. We recommend doing only server grade OS installs.
All you need to do is to configure the perfSONAR Debian repository source, along with our signing key, on your Debian/Ubuntu machine. You will need to follow the steps below as privileged user:
cd /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ curl -o perfsonar-release.list http://downloads.perfsonar.net/debian/perfsonar-release.list curl http://downloads.perfsonar.net/debian/perfsonar-official.gpg.key | apt-key add -
Ubuntu only. Additionnaly, if you're running a stripped down Ubuntu installation, you might need to enable the universe repository. This is done with the following command:
add-apt-repository universe
Then refresh the packages list so APT knows about the perfSONAR packages:
apt update
Choose one of the following bundles and see :doc:`install_options` page for more information about what these bundles are.
perfSONAR Tools:
apt install perfsonar-tools
perfSONAR Test Point:
apt install perfsonar-testpoint
During the installation process, you'll be asked to choose a password for the pscheduler database.
perfSONAR Core:
apt install perfsonar-core
During the installation process, you'll be asked to choose a password for the pscheduler and the esmond databases.
perfSONAR Central Management:
apt install perfsonar-centralmanagement
During the installation process, you'll be asked to choose a password for the esmond database.
perfSONAR Toolkit:
apt install perfsonar-toolkit
During the installation process, you'll be asked to choose a password for the pscheduler and the esmond databases.
Note
On Debian 10, only the perfsonar-tools
and the perfsonar-testpoint
bundles are supported at the moment.
In addition to any of the bundles above you may also optionally choose to install one or more of our add-on packages (these are automatically added on the perfsonar-toolkit bundle):
apt install perfsonar-toolkit-ntp
- Automatically detects closest NTP servers and sets them in ntp.confapt install perfsonar-toolkit-security
- Adds default firewall rules and installs fail2banapt install perfsonar-toolkit-servicewatcher
- Adds a cron job that checks if services are still runningapt install perfsonar-toolkit-sysctl
- Adds default sysctl tuning settingsapt install perfsonar-toolkit-systemenv-testpoint
- Configures auto-update and set some default logging locations
You may also run the command below to get everything listed above on perfsonar-testpoint and perfsonar-core bundles:
/usr/lib/perfsonar/scripts/install-optional-packages.py
Note
On a perfsonar-centralmanagement system you probably only want the optional perfsonar-toolkit-servicewatcher package to be installed.
If you want to reduce the perfSONAR installation size as much as possible, you can call apt
with the --no-install-recommends
option. This will prevent Debian recommended packages to be automatically installed (you can also configure this globaly in the APT configuration files with the statement APT::Install-Recommends "0";
). This can become useful when you want to install the perfsonar-testpoint bundle with the less overhead possible.
Step 3 can be ignored for perfsonar-toolkit package installation as its instructions are included and run automatically
NTP Tuning
Auto-select NTP servers based on proximity
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is required by the tools in order to obtain accurate measurements. Some of the tools such as OWAMP will give correct results unless NTP is running. If the optional package perfsonar-toolkit-ntp was installed this has already been done for you, but if you want to re-run manually:
/usr/lib/perfsonar/scripts/configure_ntpd new service ntp restart
You can also configure your own set of NTP servers if you want.
You can verify if NTP is running with the following command:
/usr/sbin/ntpq -p
System Tuning
It is important to make sure that your host is properly tuned for maximum TCP performance on the WAN. You should verify that htcp, not reno, is the default TCP congestion control algorithm, and that the maximum TCP buffers are big enough for your paths of interest.
If you have installed the perfsonar-toolkit-sysctl package, all should be ready for you, but if you want to rerun manually:
/usr/lib/perfsonar/scripts/configure_sysctl
Please refer to linux host tuning for more information.
If you have installed the perfsonar-toolkit-security package, then your iptables are already configured with our default rules. The package also installs fail2ban.
If you would like to configure the rules manually, then please review the document here on the ports that need to be open.
The perfsonar-toolkit-security package uses firewalld to manage the firewall rules.
Additionally, pscheduler allows you to limit the parameters of tests such as duration and bandwidth based on the requesters IP address. It does this through the file pscheduler/limits.conf
.
ESnet provides a file containing all R&E subnets, which is updated nightly. Instructions on how to download this file and configure pScheduler to use it are described on the page :doc:`manage_limits`.
Note that the perfsonar-toolkit-security package is automatically included in the perfsonar-toolkit bundle.
If you have installed the perfsonar-toolkit-systemenv-testpoint package, then you're all set for the auto-updates of perfSONAR packages and security fix for your OS.
To ensure you always have the most current and hopefully most secure packages you can install unattended-upgrades
. You’ll need to configure it to actually install the available updates with the following commands:
apt install unattended-upgrades echo 'APT::Periodic::Update-Package-Lists "1";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/60unattended-upgrades-perfsonar echo 'APT::Periodic::Unattended-Upgrade "1";' >> /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/60unattended-upgrades-perfsonar echo 'APT::Periodic::AutocleanInterval "31";' >> /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/60unattended-upgrades-perfsonar echo 'Unattended-Upgrade::Origins-Pattern:: "origin=perfSONAR";' >> /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/60unattended-upgrades-perfsonar
A cronjob will automatically install security updates from Debian/Ubuntu and new packages present in the perfsonar release repository every night. A trace of all updates applied will be stored in /var/log/unattended-upgrades/unattended-upgrades.log
.
Full perfSONAR toolkit upgrades (i.e. upgrade to new major versions) might still need a manual intervention to properly conclude, but we will then announce that through our usual communication channels.
Note
Automatic updates are enabled by default in the perfSONAR Toolkit.
The perfsonar-toolkit-servicewatcher installs scripts that check if pscheduler, owamp, databases and other processes are running and restarts if they have stopped unexpectedly.
The install automatically configures cron to run the service_watcher regularly.
To run the script manually, run:
/usr/lib/perfsonar/scripts/service_watcher
Note: this step can be done through the web interface if the perfsonar-toolkit bundle was installed. See :doc:`manage_admin_info`.
No actual configuration is required but filling fields such as administrator_email, site_name, city, country, latitude, longitude, etc. are highly recommended. You can add these by removing the leading # of any property and filling it out with a proper value for your host. Changes will be picked-up automatically without need for any restarts.
You can start all the services by rebooting the host since all are configured to run by default. In order to check services status issue the following commands:
service pscheduler-scheduler status service pscheduler-runner status service pscheduler-archiver status service pscheduler-ticker status service owamp-server status service perfsonar-lsregistrationdaemon status
If they are not running you may start them with appropriate service commands as a root user. For example:
service pscheduler-scheduler start service pscheduler-runner start service pscheduler-archiver start service pscheduler-ticker start service owamp-server start service perfsonar-lsregistrationdaemon start
Note that you may have to wait a few hours for NTP to synchronize your clock before (re)starting owamp-server.
If you installed the perfsonar-centralmanagement bundle see the following documents:
After installing the perfsonar-toolkit bundle, you can refer to the general perfSONAR configuration from :doc:`install_config_first_time`.
If you had installed a perfSONAR 4.3.x (or 4.2.x) bundle and you now want to upgrade to perfSONAR 4.4, you'll have to follow the instructions here below. This will work for all Debian and Ubuntu versions supported on both releases, i.e. Debian 9, Debian 10 and Ubuntu 18.
If you have auto-update enabled and already using the perfsonar-release.list
APT source file (as was instructed when installing 4.3 or 4.2), you should receive the 4.4 upgrade automatically. However, because of some dependency changes and repository name change, the full upgrade need to be done manually.
If you don't use the auto-update feature, to upgrade your perfsonar installation, you need to run:
apt update apt upgrade
The measurements and the measurement archives that you already have defined in your 4.3.x (or 4.2.x) installation will be migrated to the 4.4 toolkit automatically.
If you are upgrading from 4.2, you'll need to run the command apt dist-upgrade
because of a change in the depencies created by the move to Python 3.
Note
You might see apt
issuing a warning about conflicting distribution with a message like W: Conflicting distribution: http://downloads.perfsonar.net/debian perfsonar-release InRelease (expected perfsonar-4.3 but got perfsonar-4.4)
This is expected and can be ignored because you indeed are upgrading from 4.3 to 4.4.
If you want to move from the perfsonar-testpoint bundle to another bundle that we provide for Debian, you can do so by following the instructions above from :ref:`install_debian_step2`.
If you have a perfSONAR host running Ubuntu 16 and you want to upgrade it to 18, we recommend you to follow the following steps:
- Upgrade Ubuntu 16 to Ubuntu 18 (following official instructions, here are Bionic Upgrades notes)
- Reboot your system unless already done in previous step.
- Run apt-get update; apt-get dist-upgrade to get the latest version of perfSONAR.
- Reboot your system one last time.
Alternatively, do a fresh installation of perfSONAR on Ubuntu 18.