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Reliability and State Machines in an Advanced Network Testbed

Reliability and State Machines in an Advanced Network Testbed. Mac Newbold School of Computing University of Utah MS Thesis Defense April 5, 2004 Advisor: Prof. Jay Lepreau. Distributed Systems. Distributed Systems are complex Many components Distributed across multiple systems

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Reliability and State Machines in an Advanced Network Testbed

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  1. Reliability and State Machines in an Advanced Network Testbed Mac Newbold School of Computing University of Utah MS Thesis Defense April 5, 2004 Advisor: Prof. Jay Lepreau

  2. Distributed Systems • Distributed Systems are complex • Many components • Distributed across multiple systems • Component failures are relatively common • But should not cause system breakdown • “A distributed system is one in which the failure of a computer you didn’t even know existed can render your own computer unusable.” – Leslie Lamport, quoted in CACM, June 1992 Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  3. Our Context: Emulab • Emulab is an advanced network testbed • Complex time- and space-shared system • System dynamically reconfigures nodes and network links to create “experiments” • Key architectural feature: Central Database • System uses DB for storage, communication • Complex system with many different scripts and programs on clients and servers Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  4. Emulab Background • First prototype in April 2000 (10 nodes) • In production since Oct. 2000 (40 nodes) • Early versions weren’t perfect • Reliability problems • Experiments of limited size • Inefficient use of resources • Problem is becoming harder • 200 nodes, 400 remote, 2000 virtual nodes Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  5. Four Key Challenges Emulab requirements: • Reliability • Scalability • Performance and Efficiency • Generality and Portability Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  6. 1. Reliability • Complex systems are hard to make reliable • Many sources of unreliability: • Hardware – commodity PCs as nodes • Software – misconfiguration, bugs, etc. • Humans – can interrupt at any time • More complexity and more parts mean higher chance that something is broken at any given time Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  7. 2. Scalability • Almost everything a testbed provides is harder to provide at a larger scale • Larger scale requires more resources • If throughput doesn’t increase, things slow down at larger scale • Increased load adversely affects reliability • Practical scalability limited by reliability, performance and efficiency Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  8. 3. Performance and Efficiency • One direct requirement on performance: • Emulab is used in an interactive style • System tasks must complete in “a few minutes” • Indirect requirements: • Scalability requirement places high demands on many system components • Maximize efficient resource utilization • As many users/experiments as possible in the shortest time with the fewest resources Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  9. 4. Generality and Portability • Workload Generality • Wide variety of research, teaching, development, and testing activities • Good support for minimally and non-instrumented client OS’s and devices • Model generality • Evolving system • New types of network devices • Portable and non-intrusive client software Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  10. Summary of Challenges • Three challenges are closely related • Fourth is a constraint more than a challenge • Reliability is key • Failure rates directly impact scalability, performance, and efficiency • Generality and portability requirements constrain any solution used to address the challenges Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  11. Thesis Statement Enhancing Emulab with a flexible framework based on state machines provides better monitoring and control, and improves the reliability, scalability, performance, efficiency, and generality of the system. Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  12. Outline • Introduction, Background, and Challenges • Thesis Statement • State Machines in Emulab • Interactions, Control Models, stated • Node Boot State Machines • Results • Related and Future Work • Conclusion Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  13. State Machines • Also called Finite State Machines (FSMs), Finite State Automata (FSAs), or Statecharts in UML • Well-known model • Simple • Explicit model • Rich and flexible • Easy to understand and visualize Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  14. Example State Machine • Three main parts: • States • Transitions • Directional • Events • Associated with transitions – labels • Stored in database • diagrams generated automatically from DB Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  15. State Machines in Emulab • Each state machine has a “type” • Currently three: node boot, node allocation, and experiment status • Multiple machines allowed within a type • Only in one state in one machine of a type • States can have “timeouts” with actions • Timer starts when state is entered • State “triggers” – Entry Actions Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  16. Direct Interaction • Within a type, can take a transition from a state in one machine (or “mode”) to a state in another machine of that type • Known as “mode transition” in Emulab • Similar to hierarchical state machines • Highlights similarities/symmetries • Most machines are variations of another • Improved code reuse Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  17. Direct Interaction Example Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  18. Models of State Machine Control • Centralized monitoring & control: stated • State changes submitted, checked for correctness, applicable actions performed • Daemon tracks timeouts • Used for Node Boot state machines • Distributed management of state machine • No central service enforcing correctness • No dependency on central service • Timeouts harder to implement Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  19. The stated State Daemon • Listens for events continuously • State transitions cause database updates • Invalid transitions cause notifications • Timeouts, timeout actions, triggers configurable in DB for each state • Caching – only writer of node boot states • Modular design – dispatch events to proper action handlers Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  20. Node Boot State Machines • Nodes in Emulab self-configure • Monitored via state machines – stated • “Normal” node boot machine • Variations – “Minimal” • Reloading node disks Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  21. Node Self-Configuration • Nodes send state events during booting to allow progress to be monitored • “Global knowledge” inside state daemon • Better decisions about recovery steps • Finer granularity gives more information for recovery, allows for shorter timeouts • Each OS image is associated with a “mode” (state machine) that describes its behavior Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  22. “Normal” Node Boot Machine • Start in SHUTDOWN • DHCP, start OS booting • When Emulab-specific configuration begins, enter TBSETUP • ISUP when finished • In case of failure, can retry from SHUTDOWN Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  23. Variations of Node Boot • Example: MINIMAL • For OS images with little or no special Emulab support • ISUP generated by stated if necessary • Immediate or ping • SilentReboot allowed in this mode Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  24. Reloading Node Disks • Mode transition into RELOAD / SHUTDOWN • RELOADDONE transitions into mode for newly-installed OS image Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  25. Reloading and Mode Transitions Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  26. Experiment Status State Machine • Uses distributed model • Stored in database, but not strictly enforced • Documents life-cycle • Restricts user interruption • Reduces a source of errors • Can queue, activate, modify, restart, swap, or terminate an expt. Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  27. Node Allocation State Machine • Distributed control model • Diagram documents the way the states are used by the program, but not currently enforced • Either reloads nodes with a custom image, or reboots them as members of the experiment Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  28. Results: Context • Emulab in production 1 year before state machines were added • In production 3 years since first stated • 650 users, 150 projects, 75 institutions • 19 papers, top venues • Over 155,000 nodes allocated in nearly 10,000 experiment instances • 13 classes at 10 universities • Emulab SW on 6 more testbeds, 4 planned Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  29. Results • Anecdotal: (others in thesis) • Reliability/Performance: Preventing race conditions • Generality: Graceful handling of custom OS images • Generality: New node types • Experiment: • Reliability/Scalability: Improved timeout mechanisms Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  30. Reliability/Performance: Preventing Race Conditions • Expt. ends, nodes move to holding expt., get reloaded, then freed while they boot • Problem: Getting allocated while booting • Node appears unresponsive, gets forcefully power cycled, corrupts FS on disk • Solution: don’t free immediately • Add trigger on next ISUP for a node that finishes booting, that frees it when booted Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  31. Generality: Graceful Handlingof Custom OS Images • Users create custom OS images • Emulab client software is optional • Problem: Nodes don’t send state events • Solution: “Minimal” state machine • SHUTDOWN: maybe on server, optional • BOOTING: server side, trigger checks ISUP • ISUP: either node sends, or generated when pingable, or generated immediately Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  32. Generality: New Node Types • Emulab is always growing and changing • State machine model and our framework are flexible to provide graceful evolution • We’ve added 5 new node types • IXPs, wide-area, PlanetLab, vnodes, sim-nodes • Mostly used existing machines • 2 new machines, slight variations • 1 change to stated to add a new trigger Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  33. Reliability/Scalability: Improved Timeout Mechanisms • Before: reboot node, wait for it to boot • Static, 7 minute timeout • Pragmatic – minimizes false positives/negatives • Avg. 4 min., but max. error-free boot is 15 min. • 11 minute delay is too long • Improved: state machine monitoring • Fine-grained, context-sensitive timeouts • Faster error detection • Better monitoring and control Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  34. Reliability/Scalability:Improved Timeout Mechanisms • Experiment: Measure expt. swap-in time, with and without the improvements • Synthetic but plausible scenario • One node, loads an RPM (8 min. install) • Node reboots, timeout during RPM install • Reboots again, timeout again, mark node dead • Try twice per swap-in, 3 swap-in attempts • Total failure in 45 min., 3 nodes “dead” Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  35. Reliability/Scalability:Improved Timeout Mechanisms • With state machines: • Timeouts: SHUTDOWN 2 min, BOOTING 3 min, TBSETUP 10 min • Node reboots, enters BOOTING • 1 minute: Enters TBSETUP • 9 minutes: Enters ISUP, expt. ready • Succeeds, with no dead nodes or retries • Cut time from 45 min. to 9 min. (80%) Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  36. Limitations and Issues • stated is critical infrastructure • Another single point of failure • More system complexity, new bugs, complicated debugging • Potential for scaling problems (none seen yet) • Simple heuristics for error detection • Send mail for invalid transitions Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  37. Summary of Results • Explicit model requires careful thought • Improves design and implementation • Visualization makes it easier to understand • Faster and more accurate error detection • Better reliability helps scalability/efficiency • Bigger expts. possible, less overhead per expt. • Flexibility for evolution, workload generality Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  38. Related Work • “Standard” Finite State Automata – basics • Timed Automata – have global clock • Message Sequence Charts (MSCs) • “Scenarios” – hierarchy, like modes/machines • UML Statecharts • States have entry actions – “triggers” • Hierarchical states – similar to modes • Can model Emulab’s timeouts Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  39. Future Work • Further developing distributed control • Add monitoring, timeouts, triggers • Better heuristics for error detection • Only flag clustered or related errors • Implement more ideas from other systems • UML’s exit actions, guarded transitions, etc. • Move code into database – i.e. triggers • Easier to modify, framework code vs. machine Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  40. Conclusion Enhancing Emulab with a flexible framework based on state machines provides better monitoring and control, and improves the reliability, scalability, performance, efficiency, and generality of the system. Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  41. Bonus Slides Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  42. Demonstrating Improvement • Currently: programs have their own retry and timeout mechanisms for node reboots • No knowledge of progress, just completion • Can cause failures by forcing a reboot, which can damage file systems on node disk • “New Way”: stated handles timeout and retry during rebooting • Implemented, not installed • Knows if progress is being made • Programs simply wait for ISUP or failure event Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  43. Demonstrating Improvement (cont’d) • These failures directly hurt reliability • Node failure can cause experiment setup to fail • Significant impact on scaling, performance, efficiency • Maximum experiment size is limited by node failure rate • Failures make things take longer • A slower system means less efficient use of resources Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  44. Demonstrating Improvement (cont’d) • Compare current vs. new: failure rate, time to completion, etc. • Test data; one of: • Historical experiments • Artificially high load • Fault injection, e.g. reboots • Why new way should help: • Better knowledge for intelligent recovery • Know when to wait longer and when to retry • Shorter timeouts allow for early error detection Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  45. Future Work:Modeling Indirect Interaction • Occur between machines of different types • Due to external relationships between the entities tracked by each type of machine • Examples: • Same entity may be tracked in two different types of machine • Nodes are in Boot and Allocation machines • Other relationship between entities • Nodes may be “owned” or allocated to an experiment – links Expt. Status and Node machines Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  46. Question and Answer Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

  47. Conclusion Enhancing Emulab with a flexible framework based on state machines provides better monitoring and control, and improves the reliability, scalability, performance, efficiency, and generality of the system. Mac Newbold - MS Thesis Defense

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