Book Image

CentOS High Performance

By : Gabriel Cánepa
Book Image

CentOS High Performance

By: Gabriel Cánepa

Overview of this book

CentOS is the enterprise level Linux OS, which is 100% binary compatible to Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). It acts as a free alternative to RedHat's commercial Linux offering, with only a change in the branding. A high performance cluster consists in a group of computers that work together as one set parallel, hence minimizing or eliminating the downtime of critical services and enhancing the performance of the application. Starting with the basic principles of clustering, you will learn the necessary steps to install a cluster with two CentOS 7 servers. We will then set up and configure the basic required network infrastructure and clustering services. Further, you will learn how to take a proactive approach to the split-brain issue by configuring the failover and fencing of the cluster as a whole and the quorum of each node individually. Further, we will be setting up HAC and HPC clusters as a web server and a database server. You will also master the art of monitoring performance and availability, identifying bottlenecks, and exploring troubleshooting techniques. At the end of the book, you’ll review performance-tuning techniques for the recently installed cluster, test performance using a payload simulation, and learn the necessary skills to ensure that the systems, and the corresponding resources and services, are being utilized to their best capacity.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
CentOS High Performance
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Clustering fundamentals


In computer science, a cluster consists of a group of computers (with each computer referred to as a node or member) that work together so that the set is seen as a single system from the outside.

The enterprise and science environments often require high computing power to analyze massive amounts of data produced every day, and redundancy. In order for the results to be always available to people either using those services or managing them, we rely on the high availability and performance of computer systems. The need of Internet websites, such as those used by banks and other commercial institutions, to perform well when under a significant load is a clear example of the advantages of using clusters.

There are two typical cluster setups. The first one involves assigning a different task to each node, thus achieving a higher performance compared with several tasks being performed by a single member on its own. Another classic use of clustering is to help ensure high availability by providing failover capabilities to the set where one node may automatically replace a failed member to minimize the downtime of one or several critical services. In either case, the concept of clustering implies not only taking advantage of the computing functionality of each member alone, but also maximizing it by complementing it with the others.

This type of cluster setup is called high availability (HA), and it aims to eliminate system downtime by failing over services from one node to another in case one of them experiences an issue that renders it inoperative. As opposed to switchover, which requires human intervention, a failover procedure is performed automatically by the cluster without any downtime. In other words, this operation is transparent to end users and clients from outside the cluster.

The second setup uses its nodes to perform operations in parallel in order to enhance the performance of one or more applications, and is called a high-performance cluster (HPC). HPCs are typically seen in scenarios involving applications and processes that use large collections of data.

Why Linux and CentOS 7?

As mentioned earlier, we will build a cluster with two machines running Linux. This choice is supported by the fact that this involves low costs and stability associated with this setup—no paid operating system or software licenses, along with the possibility of running Linux on systems with small resources (such as a Raspberry Pi or relatively old hardware). Thus, we can set up a cluster with very little resources or money.

We will begin our own journey toward clustering by setting up the separate nodes that will make up our system. Our choice of operating system is Linux and CentOS version 7, as the distribution, which is the latest available release of CentOS as of now. The binary compatibility with Red Hat Enterprise Linux © (which is one of the most well-used distributions in enterprise and scientific environments) along with its well-proven stability are the reasons behind this decision.

Note

CentOS 7 is available for download, free of charge, from the project's web site at http://www.centos.org/. In addition to this, specific details about the release can always be consulted in release notes available through the CentOS wiki, http://wiki.centos.org/Manuals/ReleaseNotes/CentOS7.

Downloading CentOS

To download CentOS, go to http://www.centos.org/download/ and click on one of the three options outlined in the following screenshot:

  • DVD ISO: This is an .iso file (~4 GB) that can be written into regular DVD optical media and includes the common tools. Download this file if you have permanent access to a reliable Internet connection that you can use to download other packages and utilities later.

  • Everything ISO: This is an .iso file (~7 GB) with the complete set of packages made available in the base repository of CentOS 7. Download this file if you do not have access to a permanent Internet connection or if your plan contemplates the possibility of installing or populating a local or network mirror.

  • alternative downloads: This link will take you to a public directory within an official nearby CentOS mirror where the previous options are available along with others, including different choices of desktop versions (GNOME or KDE), and the minimal .iso file (~570 MB), which contains the core or essential packages of the distribution.

Although all the three download options will work, we will use the minimal install as it is sufficient for our purpose at hand, and we can install other needed packages using public software package repositories with the standard Centos package manager yum later. The recommended .iso file to download is the latest that is available from the download page, which at the time of writing this is CentOS 7.0 1406 x86_64 Minimal.iso.