Storage nodes not deploying images
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@george1421 Something else to consider is that your image push time will be less than 5 min per system per unicast. Can you stage these systems (next system) that fast? It will take longer for windows to install than it will to push out 5 systems in series.
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@george1421 He has another group called
default
that doesn’t have any nodes in it. I know from the screenshot he posted for the Images Storage Groups. default is listed there. I’m guessing that’s what the logs are referring to. -
Based on your thoughts about the Image replication log files I used Webmin to check the Images folder on each server. It seems that you might be correct, it shows that there is a small file size difference between the main server and the two storage servers. It also seems that rights didn’t transfer the same, both storage servers have different rights to the files.
I marked each file manager with the server for reference:
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@EuroEnglish The other thing I see is file ownership is different on each system too. That’s not right.
Fog will use the user account listed for each storage node to copy the files from the master node to the remote nodes. This is done over ftp from the master server in the storage group to all slave nodes in the same storage group. Systems defined in FOG but in a different storage group will be left out of the replication cycle.
Did you seed the files on each storage node or did FOG do this?
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Well spotted on the owner difference, I didn’t even notice that one - Strange as it pretty obvious now you mentioned it. All the image replication was done by Fog itself, however it could be that I messed something up when I was setting up the different users on the different servers - Again, could be part of the problem.
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I have deleted the ‘Default’ storage group, it will never be used and so I guess there is no point leaving it there. I will add another group, ‘Teacher’, to separate the different images, but that can wait until I have everything running correctly. That should clear up those log file entries I would imagine.
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@EuroEnglish The fog installer along with a couple extra commands can fix these things.
SSH into each box, become root with
sudo -i
Make sure that inside/opt/fog/.fogsettings
(as root) the username field is set tofog
. Then re-run the fog installer (again, as root). This will fix the passwords & user names both on the local system & in the DB. Then on each box, reset ownership & permissions of the images withchown -R fog:root /images;chmod -R 777 /images
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Hi Wayne,
After a few small issues sorting out user names and passwords, I reran the Fog Installer and then set the ownership/permissions. That all looks good now. Thanks for that help.I ran into a problem with my second storage node and deleted it from Storage Management, then added it back in, which put it at the top of the list in “All storage nodes”. Now when I deploy to the 6 computers all of them deploy from this storage node, previously all pulled from my main server (which was at the top of the storage management list before).
I think that my problem is that I am misunderstanding the ‘Max Clients’ option, I presumed that it would send an image to the host from one node, until it hits the max client number, then start sending from the next node automatically, and so on. I am not registering my hosts and simply selecting deploy, therefore it seems to be ignoring settings as the hosts aren’t running as clients. Could that be right?
Thanks again
Peter
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Hi George,
I just created a simple multicast session for 6 hosts as a test, it ran really well and seems faster than 6 individual unicast sessions. I am wondering how Fog processes multicast sessions, when the multicast was running I monitored the Fog Management home page and noticed that my main server was the only thing showing transmit data, however both my 2 storage nodes seemed to be receiving the same amount of data. Does multicast push from the main server to the hosts? Or, does the main server push to the storage nodes and they distribute the session? My bandwidth was fluctuating between 500 Mbps and 3000 Mbps, which tells me that all three servers must be pooling the multicast session, but maybe the bandwidth monitor on the dashboard isn’t accurate?Thanks again for all your help with this.
Peter
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@EuroEnglish said in Storage nodes not deploying images:
I am not registering my hosts and simply selecting deploy, therefore it seems to be ignoring settings as the hosts aren’t running as clients. Could that be right?
This is why random storage nodes are being selected for imaging despite location settings - The location plugin only works with registered hosts. FOG for all intensive purposes doesn’t really care a lot about non-registered hosts. All of FOG’s features come to life when hosts are registered.
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Hi Wayne,
I just created a simple multicast session, a great suggestion from George, for 6 hosts as a test, it ran really well and seems much faster than 6 individual unicast sessions. I am wondering how Fog processes multicast sessions, when the multicast was running I monitored the Fog Management home page and noticed that my main server was the only thing showing transmit data, however both my 2 storage nodes seemed to be receiving the same amount of data. Does multicast push from the main server to the hosts? Or, does the main server push to the storage nodes and they distribute the session? My bandwidth was fluctuating between 500 Mbps and 3000 Mbps, which tells me that all three servers must be pooling the multicast session, but maybe the bandwidth monitor on the dashboard isn’t accurate?I am trying to work out, once I start deploying 20 or more hosts at a time, what the best method would be. If multicasting utilizes the normal server and all storage nodes I can create a larger number of storage nodes to increase the combined available bandwidth. If multicasting only uses the normal server though, I may as well not have more than one storage node (a good way to make sure I have backups of images in case of normal server failure).
I am not finding any information online about how the multicasting distributes workload and this could define whether smaller unicast deploys or larger multicast would work better for me.
Thanks again for your help, really helped on the issues the Wiki didn’t cover.
Regards
Peter
Thanks again for all your help with this.
Peter
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@EuroEnglish AFAIK, multicast sessions are only hosted by the master server. Unless something has changed in the multicast bits only the master server sends out the image.
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@EuroEnglish said in Storage nodes not deploying images:
however both my 2 storage nodes seemed to be receiving the same amount of data
Understand a multicast will be received by all hosts on your network unless you are running igmp snooping or multicast routing in sparse mode.
Your bandwidth will fluctuate as your clients consume the image. The faster systems will have to wait for the slower systems to consume the image. This is because there is a single data stream consumed by all.
create a larger number of storage nodes to increase the combined available bandwidth.
Remember with a multicast there is 1 data stream with only 1 talker and X number of listeners. Adding storage nodes will not make anything work better, faster, brighter. You can multicast to 1 node or 1000 nodes, it consumes the same bandwidth (well that is stretching it a bit [because there are ACK packets sent from the clients back to the FOG server], but I hope you understand).
If you want to go faster get a fast FOG server running on SSD disks. Switch the data compression from gzip to zstd and have fast clients (to consume the image faster).
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@george1421
I would imagine that the most limiting factor would be the 1Gb limitation on the master server NIC itself. I looked into bonding a couple of NICs on my master server, however most reviews seems to suggest that this actually causes problems and can slow things down - As they would share a common IP address in Ubuntu/Fog, but two different IP addresses in the Hyper-V host computer it is running on, therefore confusion about packets sending and receiving out of order.Ultimately the rest of the network is running 1Gb fiber as well, so even increasing the server to 2 bonded 1Gb NIC’s would still bottleneck.
I guess at this stage I am running about as fast a possible with Fog, and it is much faster than my old WDS system. I can remove all the storage nodes, as we have a single campus and deploy without registering clients, so everything will go to the master server anyway. All I need to do is make sure that I make a good backup of my Hyper-V virtual machine, then make checkpoints before doing any updates to both Ubuntu and/or Fog server, that way I am covered in the event of a crash.
This imaging solution is far superior to WDS and Ghost, creating and capturing images is easier and faster, deploying is much faster. It will save weeks of work over this summer alone, and moving forwards it will certainly get better and better. I only wish I had know about this a few years ago, I would have far less grey hairs
I am going to mark this as resolved, given that I was trying to do something it simply wasn’t built to do that way. However I really want to thank both you and Wayne for your help, it has helped find and resolve some other issues I didn’t even know I had. Plus given me a better understanding of Ubuntu and Fog, which is just as important for a newbie like myself to both systems.
Regards
Peter
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@george1421 said in Storage nodes not deploying images:
@EuroEnglish AFAIK, multicast sessions are only hosted by the master server. Unless something has changed in the multicast bits only the master server sends out the image.
This has changed, the non-master storage nodes are now able to multicast too. It’s something Tom worked on maybe 6 months ago. It was so multicast wouldn’t go across the WAN link and conform to the settings set in Location Management.