Software Installation with EasyBuild¶
Sometimes the modules installed in the cluster are not enough for your purposes and you need some other software or a different version of a software.
For most commonly used software, chances are high that there is already a recipe that EasyBuild provides, which you can use. But what is EasyBuild?
EasyBuild
EasyBuild is the software used to build and install software on ZIH systems.
The aim of this page is to introduce users to working with EasyBuild and to utilizing it to create modules.
Prerequisites¶
- Shell access to ZIH systems
- Basic knowledge about:
- the ZIH system
- the module system on ZIH systems
EasyBuild uses a configuration file called recipe or "EasyConfig", which contains all the information about how to obtain and build the software:
- Name
- Version
- Toolchain (think: Compiler + some more)
- Download URL
- Build system (e.g.
configure && make
orcmake && make
) - Config parameters
- Tests to ensure a successful build
The build system part is implemented in so-called "EasyBlocks" and contains the common workflow. Sometimes, those are specialized to encapsulate behavior specific to multiple/all versions of the software. Everything is written in Python, which gives authors a great deal of flexibility.
Set Up a Custom Module Environment and Build Your Own Modules¶
Installation of the new software (or version) does not require any specific credentials.
Prerequisites¶
- An existing EasyConfig
- a place to put your modules.
Step by Step Guide¶
Step 1: Create a workspace where you install your modules. You need a place where your modules are placed. This needs to be done only once:
marie@login$ ws_allocate EasyBuild 50
marie@login$ ws_list | grep 'directory.*EasyBuild'
workspace directory : /data/horse/ws/marie-EasyBuild
Step 2: Allocate nodes. You can do this with interactive jobs (see the example below) and/or
put commands in a batch file and source it. The latter is recommended for non-interactive jobs,
using the command sbatch
instead of srun
. For the sake of illustration, we use an
interactive job as an example. Depending on the partitions that you want the module to be usable on
later, you need to select nodes with the same architecture. Thus, use nodes from cluster power
for
building, if you want to use the module on nodes of that cluster. ~~In this example, we assume
that we want to use the module on nodes with x86 architecture and thus, we use Haswell nodes.~~
marie@login$ srun --nodes=1 --cpus-per-task=4 --time=08:00:00 --pty /bin/bash -l
Warning
Using EasyBuild on the login nodes is not allowed.
Step 3: Specify the workspace. The rest of the guide is based on it. Please create an
environment variable called WORKSPACE
with the path to your workspace:
marie@compute$ export WORKSPACE=/data/horse/ws/marie-EasyBuild #see output of ws_list above
Step 4: Load the correct module environment release
according to your needs:
marie@compute$ module load release/23.04
Step 5: Load module EasyBuild
marie@compute$ module load EasyBuild
Step 6: Set up the EasyBuild configuration.
This can be either done via environment variables:
marie@compute$ export EASYBUILD_CONFIGFILES=/software/util/etc/easybuild.d/zih.cfg \
export EASYBUILD_DETECT_LOADED_MODULES=unload \
export EASYBUILD_SUBDIR_USER_MODULES= \
export EASYBUILD_BUILDPATH="/dev/shm/${USER}-EasyBuild${SLURM_JOB_ID:-}" \
export EASYBUILD_SOURCEPATH="${WORKSPACE}/sources:/software/util/sources" \
export EASYBUILD_INSTALLPATH="${WORKSPACE}/easybuild"
Or you can do that via the configuration file at $HOME/.config/easybuild/config.cfg
.
An initial file can be generated with:
marie@compute$ eb --confighelp > ~/.config/easybuild/config.cfg
Edit this file by uncommenting the above settings and specifying the respective values.
Note the difference in naming as each setting in the environment has the EASYBUILD_
prefix
and is uppercase, while it is lowercase in the config.
For example $EASYBUILD_DETECT_LOADED_MODULES
above corresponds to detect-loaded-modules
in the config file.
Note that you cannot use environment variables (like $WORKSPACE
or $USER
) in the config file.
So the approach with the $EASYBUILD_
variables is more flexible but needs to be done before each
use of EasyBuild and could be forgotten.
You can also combine those approaches setting some in the config and some in the environment,
the latter will take precedence.
The first variable $EASYBUILD_CONFIGFILES
makes sure the settings used for installing all other modules
on the cluster are used.
I.e. that config file is read before the custom one in your $HOME
.
By that most of the configuration is already set up.\
But of course e.g. the installation path needs to be set by you.
The configuration used can be shown via:
marie@compute$ eb --show-config
This shows all changed/non-default options while the parameter --show-full-config
shows all options.
The hierarchical module naming scheme (used on our systems) affects e.g. location and naming of modules.
In order for EasyBuild to use the existing modules,
you need to use the "all" modules folder of the main tree.
But likely only the "Core" subdirectory is set in $MODULEPATH
.
Nonetheless, the module search path can be extended easily with module use
:
marie@compute$ echo $MODULEPATH
/software/modules/rapids/r23.10/all/Core:/software/modules/releases/rapids
marie@compute$ module use /software/modules/rapids/r23.10/all
marie@compute$ echo $MODULEPATH
/software/modules/rapids/r23.10/all:/software/modules/rapids/r23.10/all/Core:/software/modules/releases/rapids
Take care to adjust the path to the release you use.
I.e. in the above example the module release/23.10
was loaded resulting in
/software/modules/rapids/r23.10/all/Core
on this cluster.
For the module use
command you take that (from $MODULEPATH
) and only strip of the /Core
.
Or you can use this one-line command to do it automatically:
marie@compute$ ml use $(echo "$MODULEPATH" | grep -oE '(^|:)[^:]+/Core:' | sed 's|/Core:||')
Finally, you need to tell LMod about your modules:
marie@compute$ export ZIH_USER_MODULES=$EASYBUILD_INSTALLPATH
Step 7: Now search for an existing EasyConfig:
marie@compute$ eb --search TensorFlow
Step 8: Build the EasyConfig and its dependencies (option -r
)
marie@compute$ eb TensorFlow-1.8.0-fosscuda-2018a-Python-3.6.4.eb -r
This may take a long time.
If you want to investigate what would be build by that command, first run it with -D
:
marie@compute$ eb TensorFlow-1.8.0-fosscuda-2018a-Python-3.6.4.eb -Dr
Step 9: To use your custom build modules you need to load the "base" modenv (see step 4) and add your custom modules to the search path.
Using the variable from step 6:
marie@compute$ module use "${EASYBUILD_INSTALLPATH}/modules/all"
marie@compute$ export ZIH_USER_MODULES=$EASYBUILD_INSTALLPATH
marie@compute$ export LMOD_IGNORE_CACHE=1
OR directly the path from step 1:
marie@compute$ module use "/data/horse/ws/marie-EasyBuild/easybuild/modules/all"
marie@compute$ export ZIH_USER_MODULES=/data/horse/ws/marie-EasyBuild/easybuild
marie@compute$ export LMOD_IGNORE_CACHE=1
Then you can load it just like any other module:
marie@compute$ module load TensorFlow-1.8.0-fosscuda-2018a-Python-3.6.4 #replace with the name of your module
The key is the module use
command, which brings your modules into scope, so module load
can find
them.
The LMOD_IGNORE_CACHE
line makes LMod
pick up the custom modules instead of searching the
system cache which doesn't include your new modules.
Troubleshooting¶
When building your EasyConfig fails, you can first check the log mentioned and scroll to the bottom to see what went wrong.
It might also be helpful to inspect the build environment EasyBuild uses. For that you can run:
marie@compute$ eb myEC.eb --dump-env-script`
This command creates a sourceable .env
-file with module load
and export
commands that show
what EasyBuild does before running, e.g., the configuration step.
It might also be helpful to use
marie@compute$ export LMOD_IGNORE_CACHE=0
(Especially) when you want to use additional features of EasyBuild, such as the GitHub integration, you might need to set a specific Python version to use by EasyBuild.
That is unrelated to any Python module you might wish to use or install!
Furthermore, when using EasyBuild you should not have any other modules loaded,
not even Python
.
Which Python executable is used by EasyBuild can be shown by executing:
marie@compute$ EB_VERBOSE=1 eb --version
You can change it by setting EB_PYTHON
, e.g.:
marie@compute$ export EB_PYTHON=python3.8
In case you are using a virtualenv for use with EasyBuild
then using python
instead of python3.8
or similar is enough
as there will be a python
binary available inside your virtualenv.