Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
62 lines (48 loc) · 2.08 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

62 lines (48 loc) · 2.08 KB

Introduction

gewake is a script developed at NorthWest Research Associates (NWRA) to allow machines to be shutdown when idle and automatically woken up when needed. It works pretty well for us, but there may be aspects of it that are specific to how we have Grid Engine setup locally.

Overview

gewake is run periodically from cron. It runs qstat to see if any jobs are waiting. If there are, it looks for hosts that are down and wakes one or more up from its list of hosts. To do this it runs a wakeup command with the hostname of the machine to wake up as the argument. A sample wakeup command is provided that uses ether-wake to send a magic WOL packet to the machine, but it could be done in other ways.

Installation

  • Edit gewake.hosts and add the hostnames you want to be woken up.
  • Copy gewake.hosts to /usr/local/etc (or similar) on the machine you want to run the gewake monitor. This can be any machine that can run qstat and is on the same LAN as the hosts to be woken up.
  • Edit gewake and change $wakehostsfiles and $wakeupcmd as needed
  • Copy gewake to /usr/local/bin or similar.
  • Edit gewake.cron to set the grid engine environment and to point to where you are installing gewake
  • Copy gewake.cron to /etc/cron.d
  • mkdir /var/lib/gewake

Using wakeup

  • Edit etherhosts and enter the ethernet MAC addresses as shown

  • Copy etherhosts to /usr/local/etc or similer.

  • Copy wakeup to /usr/local/bin or similar.

  • Edit /etc/sudoers to give your users permission to use wakeup if desired. This is not necessary for gewake unless you don't want that running as root in which case you will need to add that user to the sudoers file. This is what we do:

    For wakeup

    Cmnd_Alias WAKEUP = /sbin/ether-wake *

    Don't log wakeup

    Defaults!WAKEUP !syslog

    %usergroup ALL=NOPASSWD: WAKEUP

zz-hibernate

This is a script we use locally to shut down idle machines. We run it from /etc/cron.hourly. It probably will need to get modified for local paths and preferences.

Author

Orion Poplawski orion@nwra.com