How to access, set up, and test your account
Preliminary steps
All the documentation is maintained in the T3 twiki pages:
https://wiki.chipp.ch/twiki/bin/view/CmsTier3/WebHome . Please take a look at it to explore T3's capabilities.
Information about T3 mailing-lists:
- Subscribe to the
cms-tier3-users@lists.psi.ch
mailing list using its web interface (list archives): . This mailing list is used to communicate information on Tier-3 matters (downtimes, outages, news, etc.) or for discussions among users and admins.
- To privately contact the CMS Tier-3 administrators write to:
cms-tier3@lists.psi.ch
- Both lists are read by the administrators and are archived. You can submit support requests to either of them. Mails to the user list have the added advantage that they can be read by everyone.
T3 policies
Be aware about the
Tier3Policies
Organising of the T3 accounts in primary groups
Each T3 account belongs to a specific primary group and to the generic secondary group
cms that's used for common files like the CMS files uploaded at T3 by
PhEDEx ; these are the current primary groups :
ETHZ |
UniZ |
PSI |
ethz-ecal |
uniz-higgs |
psi-bphys |
ethz-bphys |
uniz-pixel |
psi-pixel |
ethz-ewk |
uniz-bphys |
|
ethz-higgs |
|
|
ethz-susy |
|
|
The primary groups feature :
- a simple
/pnfs /shome /scratch /tmp
space usage monitoring
-
/pnfs
file and dir protection since only the owner is able to delete his/her files ; this file protection is usually not guaranteed by any CMS T1/T2/T3
- an easy accounting in the batch system
- the T3 "group dirs"
/pnfs/psi.ch/cms/trivcat/store/t3groups/
where only the group members can upload or delete files
As an example, this is an ETHZ account with his
primary and his
secondary group:
$ id auser
uid=571(auser) gid=532(ethz-higgs) groups=532(ethz-higgs),500(cms)
Again as an example, this is an overview of the T3 accounts dirs
/pnfs/psi.ch/cms/trivcat/store/user/
:
$ ls -l /pnfs/psi.ch/cms/trivcat/store/user | grep -v cms
total 56
drwxr-xr-x 2 alschmid uniz-bphys 512 Feb 21 2013 alschmid
drwxr-xr-x 5 amarini ethz-ewk 512 Nov 7 15:37 amarini
drwxr-xr-x 2 arizzi ethz-bphys 512 Sep 16 17:49 arizzi
drwxr-xr-x 5 bean psi-bphys 512 Aug 24 2010 bean
drwxr-xr-x 5 bianchi ethz-higgs 512 Sep 9 09:40 bianchi
drwxr-xr-x 98 buchmann ethz-susy 512 Nov 5 20:36 buchmann
...
Eventually these are the T3 "group dirs"
/pnfs/psi.ch/cms/trivcat/store/t3groups/
; since they're "group dirs" there is not an owner so all of them belong to the
root
account but the group members will be able to upload/delete files :
$ ls -l /pnfs/psi.ch/cms/trivcat/store/t3groups/
total 5
drwxrwxr-x 2 root ethz-bphys 512 Nov 8 15:18 ethz-bphys
drwxrwxr-x 2 root ethz-ecal 512 Nov 8 15:18 ethz-ecal
drwxrwxr-x 2 root ethz-ewk 512 Nov 8 15:18 ethz-ewk
drwxrwxr-x 2 root ethz-higgs 512 Nov 8 15:18 ethz-higgs
drwxrwxr-x 2 root ethz-susy 512 Nov 8 15:18 ethz-susy
drwxrwxr-x 2 root psi-bphys 512 Nov 8 15:18 psi-bphys
drwxrwxr-x 2 root psi-pixel 512 Nov 8 15:18 psi-pixel
drwxrwxr-x 2 root uniz-bphys 512 Nov 8 15:18 uniz-bphys
drwxrwxr-x 2 root uniz-higgs 512 Nov 8 15:18 uniz-higgs
drwxrwxr-x 2 root uniz-pixel 512 Nov 8 15:18 uniz-pixel
Your T3 account and the UIs
We provide the following SL6 user interfaces ( UIs ) to develop and interactively test your programs and to send the jobs to the batch system :
Access to Login nodes is based on the institution
The access is not restricted to allow for some freedom, but you are requested to use the UI dedicated to your institution.
UI Login node |
for institution |
HW specs |
t3ui03.psi.ch |
UNIZ |
132GB RAM , 72 CPUs core (HT), 5TB /scratch |
t3ui01.psi.ch |
ETHZ, PSI |
132GB RAM , 72 CPUs core (HT), 5TB /scratch |
t3ui02.psi.ch |
All |
132GB RAM , 72 CPUs core (HT), 5TB /scratch |
- Login into a
t3ui1*
machine by ssh
; use -Y
or -X
flag for working with X applications; you might also try to connect by NX client, which allows to work efficiently with graphical applications
ssh -Y username@t3ui12.psi.ch
- If you are an external user and you don't have a standard PSI account, you'll have to change your initial password the first time you log in; use the standard
passwd
utility.
- Copy your grid credentials to the standard places, i.e. to
~/.globus/userkey.pem
and ~/.globus/usercert.pem
and make sure that their files permissions are set correctly:
-rw-r--r-- 1 feichtinger cms 2961 Mar 17 2008 usercert.pem
-r-------- 1 feichtinger cms 1917 Mar 17 2008 userkey.pem
For details about how to extract those files from your CERN User Grid-Certificate please read https://gridca.cern.ch/gridca/Help/?kbid=024010.
- Source the grid environment associated to your login shell:
source /swshare/psit3/etc/profile.d/cms_ui_env.sh # for bash
source /swshare/psit3/etc/profile.d/cms_ui_env.csh # for tcsh
- You might permanently modify your shell init files in order to automatically load the T3 grid environment ; for BASH that means placing :
[ `echo $HOSTNAME | grep t3ui` ] && [ -r /swshare/psit3/etc/profile.d/cms_ui_env.sh ] && source /swshare/psit3/etc/profile.d/cms_ui_env.sh && echo "UI features enabled"
into your ~/.bash_profile
file.
- Run
env|sort
and verify that /swshare/psit3/etc/profile.d/cms_ui_env.{sh,csh}
properly activated the setting X509_USER_PROXY=/shome/$(id -un)/.x509up_u$(id -u)"
at T3 this setting allows your jobs to read/write the files from a CMS Grid SE
- You have to complete the CMS "Virtual Organization" subscription or the following command
voms-proxy-init -voms cms
won't work. CERN details about that, e.g. who is your representative.
- Create a proxy certificate for CMS by:
voms-proxy-init -voms cms
If the command voms-proxy-init -voms cms
will fail then run the command with an additional -debug
flag and the error message will be usually sufficient for the T3 Admins to point out the problem.
- Test your access to the PSI Storage element by the
test-dCacheProtocols
command ; you should get an output like this (possibly without failed test) ; sometime the XROOTD-WAN-* tests might get stuck due to a I/O traffic from Internet but since as a local T3 user you're suppose to use the XROOTD-LAN-* I/O doors instead you can simply skip the XROOTD-WAN-* tests by both pressing Ctrl-C or by passing the option : -i "XROOTD-LAN-write" ( see below )
$ test-dCacheProtocols
Test directory: /tmp/dcachetest-20150529-1449-14476
TEST: GFTP-write ...... [OK] <-- vs gsiftp://t3se01.psi.ch:2811/
TEST: GFTP-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: GFTP-read ...... [OK]
TEST: DCAP-read ...... [OK] <-- vs dcap://t3se01.psi.ch:22125/
TEST: SRMv2-write ...... [OK] <-- vs srm://t3se01.psi.ch:8443/
TEST: SRMv2-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: SRMv2-read ...... [OK]
TEST: SRMv2-rm ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-write ...... [OK] <-- vs root://t3dcachedb03.psi.ch:1094/ <-- Use this if you run LOCAL jobs at T3 and you need root:// access to the T3 files
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-read ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-rm ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-write ...... [OK] <-- vs root://t3se01.psi.ch:1094/ <-- Use this if you run REMOTE jobs and you need root:// access to the T3 files ; e.g. you're working on lxplus
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-read ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-rm ...... [OK]
- Be aware of the external CSCS CMS User Page
- The
test-dCacheProtocols
tool can also be used to test a remote storage element (use the -h
flag to get more info about it): e.g. to test the CSCS storage element storage01.lcg.cscs.ch
:
$ test-dCacheProtocols -s storage01.lcg.cscs.ch -x storage01.lcg.cscs.ch -p /pnfs/lcg.cscs.ch/cms/trivcat/store/user/martinel -i "DCAP-read XROOTD-LAN-write XROOTD-WAN-write"
Test directory: /tmp/dcachetest-20150529-1545-16302
TEST: GFTP-write ...... [OK]
TEST: GFTP-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: GFTP-read ...... [OK]
TEST: DCAP-read ...... [IGNORE]
TEST: SRMv2-write ...... [OK]
TEST: SRMv2-ls ...... [OK]
TEST: SRMv2-read ...... [OK]
TEST: SRMv2-rm ...... [OK]
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-write ...... [IGNORE]
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-ls ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-LAN-write)
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-read ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-LAN-write)
TEST: XROOTD-LAN-rm ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-LAN-write)
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-write ...... [IGNORE]
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-ls ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-WAN-write)
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-read ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-WAN-write)
TEST: XROOTD-WAN-rm ...... [SKIPPED] (dependencies did not run: XROOTD-WAN-write)
Creating an AFS CERN Ticket
In order to access the CERN
/afs
protected dirs ( e.g. your home ) you'll need a proper ticket from CERN AFS:
kinit ${Your_CERN_Username}@CERN.CH
aklog cern.ch
The first command will provide you a kerberos ticket while the second command will use that ticket to obtain an authentication token from CERN's AFS service
Saving the t3ui1* SSH pub keys into your daily laptop/desktop/server
Hackers on Internet are constantly waiting for user mistakes, even just a misspelled
letter like in this example:
$ ssh t3ui02.psi.sh
The authenticity of host 't3ui02.psi.sh (62.210.217.195)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is c0:c5:af:36:4b:2d:1f:88:0d:f3:9c:08:cc:87:df:42.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added 't3ui02.psi.sh,62.210.217.195' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
at3user@t3ui02.psi.sh's password:
The T3 Admins can't prevent a T3 user from confusing .ch
with a .sh
so pay attention to these cases ! To avoid to digit the T3 hostnames you might define these permanent aliases instead :
More... Close
$ grep alias ~/.bash_profile | grep t3ui
alias ui12='ssh -X at3user@t3ui12.psi.ch'
alias ui15='ssh -X at3user@t3ui15.psi.ch'
alias ui16='ssh -X at3user@t3ui16.psi.ch'
alias ui17='ssh -X at3user@t3ui17.psi.ch'
alias ui18='ssh -X at3user@t3ui18.psi.ch'
alias ui19='ssh -X at3user@t3ui19.psi.ch'
More subdole attacks are the
SSH man in the middle attacks ; to detect them you have to register in
/$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
each
t3ui1*
SSH RSA public key by running these steps on each laptop/desktop/server ( also
lxplus
! ) that you're going use to login at T3:
cp -p /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts.`date +"%d-%m-%Y"`
mkdir /tmp/t3ssh/
for X in 19 18 17 16 15 12 ; do TMPFILE=`mktemp /tmp/t3ssh/XXXXXX` && ssh-keyscan -t rsa t3ui$X.psi.ch,t3ui$X,`host t3ui$X.psi.ch| awk '{ print $4}'` | cat - /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts | grep -v 'psi\.sh' > $TMPFILE && mv $TMPFILE /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts ; done
rm -rf /tmp/t3ssh
for X in 12 15 16 17 18 19 ; do echo -n "# entries for t3ui$X = " ; grep -c t3ui$X /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts ; grep -Hn --color t3ui$X /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts ; echo ; done
echo done
last
for
reports if there are duplicated rows in
/$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
for a
t3ui1*
server ; if there are you're suppose to preserve the correct occurrence and delete the others ; to delete you can use
sed -i
or by hands by
vim
or
emacs
; once you'll get just one row per
t3ui1*
server run this command and carefully compare your output with this output:
More... Close
$ ssh-keygen -l -f /$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts | grep t3ui
2048 |
d0:9c:a0:e9:8f:9c:3f:b2:f1:88:6c:15:32:07:fc:a0 |
t3ui12.psi.ch,t3ui12,192.33.123.132 (RSA) |
2048 |
77:1b:27:5e:c8:74:64:86:f8:50:f6:58:e6:6f:41:65 |
t3ui15.psi.ch,t3ui15,192.33.123.135 (RSA) |
2048 |
35:bb:d6:be:64:86:8d:db:1d:57:43:ef:05:39:72:c8 |
t3ui16.psi.ch,t3ui16,192.33.123.136 (RSA) |
2048 |
27:d1:57:f0:ac:da:1d:db:54:11:5c:46:4d:93:63:59 |
t3ui17.psi.ch,t3ui17,192.33.123.137 (RSA) |
2048 |
b1:56:06:5b:d3:da:1a:79:60:e9:02:16:be:82:fe:f7 |
t3ui18.psi.ch,t3ui18,192.33.123.138 (RSA) |
2048 |
73:fe:97:b2:e7:54:df:99:50:dc:19:3d:6f:cd:01:11 |
t3ui19.psi.ch,t3ui19,192.33.123.139 (RSA) |
force your ssh client to always check if the server you're connecting to is already mentioned in the
/$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
file and to request your consensus for servers that are absent by adding this line in
/$HOME/.ssh/config
:
StrictHostKeychecking ask
your
/$HOME/.ssh/config
can be more complex than just that line, study the
ssh_config man page or contact the T3 Admins; ideally you should put
StrictHostKeychecking yes
but in real life that's impractical.
now your ssh client will be able to detect the
SSH man in the middle attacks and if so it will report :
WARNING: REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED!
IT IS POSSIBLE THAT SOMEONE IS DOING SOMETHING NASTY!
Someone could be eavesdropping on you right now (man-in-the-middle attack)!
It is also possible that the RSA host key has just been changed.
The
t3ui1*
SSH RSA public and private keys will be
never changed, so the case
It is also possible that the RSA host key has just been changed
will be
never true.
Installing the CERN CA files into your daily browser
Install and 'trust' any CERN CA file into your daily Web browser where is loaded also your X509 Digital Certificate ( that in turn you probably got from CERN as well )
https://cafiles.cern.ch/cafiles/
Applying for the VOMS Group /cms/chcms
membership
It has been created a VOMS Group
/cms/chcms
to better serve the Swiss community of LHC physicist ;
all the Swiss CMS users should apply for the VOMS Group /cms/chcms
membership in order to automatically get :
- higher priority in the CSCS ( T2_CH_CSCS in CMS terms ) batch queues
- additional Jobs slots in the CSCS batch queues
- additional
/pnfs
space in the CSCS grid storage
- in the future, better protection of the file transfers at T3 vs the CMS file transfers coming from Internet
Once the
/cms/chcms
membership will be granted from each UI in the CMS Grid, like the T3 UIs
t3ui1*
but also from the
lxplus
servers at CERN, by running the usual
voms-proxy-init --voms cms
command a Swiss user will
automatically get the
/cms/chcms
attribute ; that can be verified by running :
$ voms-proxy-info --all | grep /cms
attribute : /cms/Role=NULL/Capability=NULL
attribute : /cms/chcms/Role=NULL/Capability=NULL
So with your Digital Certificate ( X509 ) properly loaded in your Web Browser click on
https://voms2.cern.ch:8443/voms/cms/group/edit.action?groupId=5 and require the
/cms/chcms
membership ; be aware of that port
:8443
, your Institute network policies might prevent the outgoing traffic vs that port ; if that's the case then escalate the problem to your Institute network team or simply require the
/cms/chcms
membership from another less constrained network ( like from your DSL at home )
The T3 Admins Skype Accounts
In order to both help the T3 users with their T3/T2 errors and misunderstandings and to interactively support their 'what-if' T3/T2 plans Fabio opened the Skype account
fabio.martinelli_2
to allow you to easily interact with him ; all the users are kindly invited to create a Skype account and add him
Nevertheless consider the Skype account as a 2nd level of support ; 1st always send an email to
cms-tier3@lists.psi.ch
describing your error and possibly how to reproduce it