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container-builder

Containers traditionally require root access to build from a recipe file, as such native access to build cannot be granted on OLCF HPC resources such as Titan and Summit. container-builder is an interactive container building utility that gets around this limitation by building each container on a remote ephemeral VM, streaming the output in real time to the client.

Use

container-builder requires two arguments, the name of the created container and the container definition.

$ module load container-builder
$ container-builder container.img container.recipe
... Output streams...

To list base images available within container-builder the cb-images command can be used

$ cb-images
Connecting to BuilderQueue: Connected to queue: 128.219.187.52
Requesting image list: Fetched
-----------------------------
repository: olcf/titan
tags:
- centos-7_2018-01-18
- ubuntu-16.04_2018-01-18
-----------------------------
repository: olcf/summit
tags:
- centos-7_2018-02-08

To get an overview of the builder VM status cb-status is available

$ cb-status
Connecting to BuilderQueue: Connected to queue: 128.219.187.52
[INFO] Requesting queue status
-------------
Active builders
-------------

ID: e6a0cd58-255c-4f17-b0df-51c5b0120d07
HOST: 128.219.187.95
PORT: 8080
-------------

-------------
Reserve builders
-------------

ID: 60c95481-92f3-4491-94d3-14c45bfbc279
HOST: 128.219.187.96
PORT: 8080
-------------

...

Implementation

Some insight into the build process:

  • Client initiates build request through CLI
  • Client build request enters the queue
  • Queue creates builder
  • Builder details sent to the client
  • The client connects to the builder
  • Container recipe file is sent from client to builder
  • Build output is streamed in real time to the client
  • Container image is sent from the builder to the client
  • Client disconnects from queue
  • Queue destroys VM

Deploy

To deploy container-builder three steps are taken

  • The Builder OpenStack image must be created
  • The Queue OpenStack instance must be started
  • The client application must be built

Due to the non-trivial complexity of provisioning Gitlab runners handle deployment through the CI system. Following .gitlab-ci.yml should provide insight into the provisioning process.

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