• Stars
    star
    138
  • Rank 264,508 (Top 6 %)
  • Language
    Java
  • License
    Apache License 2.0
  • Created over 10 years ago
  • Updated about 3 years ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Storm on Mesos!

Storm on Mesos

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/mesos/storm

Build Status

Overview

Storm integration with the Mesos cluster resource manager.

To use a release, you first need to unpack the distribution, fill in configurations listed below into the conf/storm.yaml file and start Nimbus using storm-mesos nimbus.

Note: It is not necessary to repack the distribution - the configuration is automatically pushed out to the slaves from Nimbus.

Known Deficiencies Versus non-Mesos Storm

  • Storm's topology 'rebalance' action is not supported and is explicitly disabled in the custom Storm version used to build this project.
  • Supervisor logs cannot be loaded via the Storm UI's link to each worker's logviewer, because the Supervisor logs are specialized per-topology when running under Mesos.

Building

Run bin/build-release.sh to download storm distribution and bundle Storm with this framework into one tar release.

STORM_RELEASE=X.X.X MESOS_RELEASE=Y.Y.Y bin/build-release.sh

Where X.X.X and Y.Y.Y are the respective versions of Storm and Mesos you wish to build against. This will build a Mesos executor package. You'll need to edit storm.yaml and supply the Mesos master configuration as well as the executor package URI (produced by the step above).

Sub-commands

Sub-commands can be invoked similar to git sub-commands.

For example the following command will download the Storm release tarball into the current working directory.

bin/build-release.sh downloadStormRelease
  • main

    Build a Storm package with the Mesos scheduler. The output of this command can be used as the package for mesos.executor.uri.

  • clean

    Attempts to clean working files and directories created when building.

  • downloadStormRelease

    A utility function to download the Storm release tarball for the targeted storm release.

    Set MIRROR environment variable to configure download mirror.

  • mvnPackage

    Runs the maven targets necessary to build the Storm Mesos framework.

  • prePackage

    Prepares the working directories to be able to package the Storm Mesos framework.

    • Optional argument specifying the Storm release tarball to package against.
  • package

    Packages the Storm Mesos Framework.

  • dockerImage

    Builds a Docker image from the current code.

  • help

    Prints out usage information about the build-release.sh script.

Docker images Building

In order to build the storm-mesos docker image, or a docker image ready to be used as mesos.container.docker.image in your storm configuration, run the following:

make help
make images STORM_RELEASE=X.X.X MESOS_RELEASE=Y.Y.Y DOCKER_REPO=mesos/storm

Where X.X.X and Y.Y.Y are the respective versions of Storm and Mesos you wish to build against. This will build a docker image containing a Mesos executor package. The resulting docker images are the following:

± docker images
REPOSITORY                TAG                                    IMAGE ID            CREATED 
mesos/storm               0.1.0-X.X.X-Y.Y.Y-jdk7                 11989e7bfa17        44 minutes ago
mesos/storm               0.1.0-X.X.X-Y.Y.Y-jdk7-onbuild         e7eb52b3eb9f        44 minutes ago

In order to use JDK 8 while building the docker image, run the following:

make images STORM_RELEASE=X.X.X MESOS_RELEASE=Y.Y.Y DOCKER_REPO=mesos/storm JAVA_PRODUCT_VERSION=8

A custom image could be built from the onbuild tagged docker image. It is based on the dockerfile onbuild/Dockerfile

Images are also published to Docker Hub under the image mesos/storm at https://hub.docker.com/r/mesos/storm/.

Releasing New Version

Select the Branch

Note that normally your local repo should be synced to the HEAD of github.com:mesos/storm's master branch. However, it is possible that you're working from a different branch and doing releases for an earlier numbered version, per the branching regime we created for handling backwards-incompatible changes in Storm (such as the package path change from backtype.storm.* to org.apache.storm.* in Storm 1.0, and the LocalState implementation change in Storm 0.10).

Storm v1.x

Just use the master branch.

Storm v0.x (e.g., v0.9.6)

Check out storm-0.x branch, ensuring you are up-to-date with the latest changes in the remote base repo's storm-0.x branch.

Generate Release

If you are a committer for this repo, then you merely need to run the following command to generate a new release:

mvn release:clean release:prepare

This will automatically update the version fields and push tags that in turn kick off a travis-ci build. This travis-ci build automatically uploads the resultant artifacts to both GitHub and DockerHub.

Running Storm on Mesos

Along with the Mesos master and Mesos cluster, you'll need to run the Storm master as well. Launch Nimbus with this command:

bin/storm-mesos nimbus

It's recommended that you also run the UI on the same machine as Nimbus via the following command:

bin/storm ui

There's a minor bug in the UI regarding how it displays the number of slots in the cluster – you don't need to worry about this, it's an artifact of there being no pre-existing slots when Storm runs on Mesos. Slots are created from available cluster resources when a topology needs its Storm worker processes to be launched.

Topologies are submitted to a Storm/Mesos cluster the exact same way they are submitted to a regular Storm cluster.

Storm/Mesos provides resource isolation between topologies. So you don't need to worry about topologies interfering with one another.

Vagrant setup

For local development and familiarizing yourself with Storm/Mesos, please see the Vagrant setup docs.

Mandatory configuration

  1. One of the following (if both are specified, Docker is preferred):

    • mesos.executor.uri: Once you fill in the configs and repack the distribution, you need to place the distribution somewhere where Mesos executors can find it. Typically this is on HDFS, and this config is the location of where you put the distribution.
    • mesos.container.docker.image: You may use a Docker image in place of the executor URI. Take a look at the Dockerfile in the top-level of this repository for an example of how to use it.
  2. mesos.master.url: URL for the Mesos master.

  3. storm.zookeeper.servers: The location of the ZooKeeper servers to be used by the Storm master.

Optional configuration

  • mesos.supervisor.suicide.inactive.timeout.secs: Seconds to wait before supervisor to suicides if supervisor has no task to run. Defaults to "120".
  • mesos.master.failover.timeout.secs: Framework failover timeout in second. Defaults to "2473600".
  • mesos.allowed.hosts: Allowed hosts to run topology, which takes hostname list as a white list.
  • mesos.disallowed.hosts: Disallowed hosts to run topology, which takes hostname list as a back list.
  • mesos.framework.role: Framework role to use. Defaults to "*".
  • mesos.framework.checkpoint: Enabled framework checkpoint or not. Defaults to false.
  • mesos.local.file.server.port: Port for the local file server to bind to. Defaults to a random port.
  • mesos.framework.name: Framework name. Defaults to "Storm!!!".
  • mesos.framework.user: Framework user to run with Mesos. Defaults to user to run with Storm on Mesos.
  • mesos.framework.principal: Framework principal to use to register with Mesos
  • mesos.framework.secret.file: Location of file that contains the principal's secret. Secret cannot end with a NL.
  • mesos.prefer.reserved.resources: Prefer reserved resources over unreserved (i.e., "*" role). Defaults to "true".
  • mesos.logviewer.sidecar.enabled: Default is "true". If you disable this setting, you will want to launch a logviewer process on each worker and nimbus host under supervision if you want to view logs in the Storm UI.

Resource configuration

  • topology.mesos.worker.cpu: CPUs per worker. Defaults to "1".
  • topology.mesos.worker.mem.mb: Memory (in MiB) per worker. Defaults to "1000".
    • worker.childopts: Use this for JVM opts. You should have about 20-25% memory overhead for each task. For example, with -Xmx1000m, you should set topology.mesos.worker.mem.mb: 1200. By default this is platform dependent.
  • topology.mesos.executor.cpu: CPUs per executor. Defaults to "0.1".
  • topology.mesos.executor.mem.mb: Memory (in MiB) per executor. Defaults to "500".
    • supervisor.childopts: Use this for executor (aka supervisor) JVM opts. You should have about 20-25% memory overhead for each task. For example, with -Xmx500m, you should set topology.mesos.executor.mem.mb: 620. By default this is platform dependent.

Automatic Launching of Logviewer

Storm-on-mesos supports automatically launching the logviewer process on each mesos worker host.

The logviewer is launched as a Mesos executor that acts as a "sidecar container" -- one logviewer is launched on each host that holds a Storm Worker for a particular framework.

Caveats:

  • The logviewer TCP port should not be one of those managed by Mesos and offered to the frameworks in the cluster. e.g., you can use port 8000, which is the default in Storm.
  • The logviewer TCP port must be unique for each Storm framework that runs in a given Mesos cluster. e.g., 8000 for one framework, and 8001 for another framework.

Configurations:

  • mesos.logviewer.sidecar.enabled: Set to "true" (which is the default).
  • logviewer.port: Set to a chosen port number, such as 8000 (which is the default).

Note that the storm-on-mesos framework attempts to discover missing logviewers and launch them, recording the logviewer processes into ZooKeeper in a subdirectory of storm.zookeeper.root (as configured in your storm.yaml configuration file). Specifically, it is recorded in {storm.zookeeper.root}/storm-mesos/logviewers/.

Running Storm on Marathon

To get started quickly, you can run Storm on Mesos with Marathon and Docker, provided you have Mesos-DNS configured in your cluster. If you're not using Mesos-DNS, set the MESOS_MASTER_ZK environment variable to point to your ZooKeeper cluster. Included is a script (bin/run-with-marathon.sh) which sets the necessary config parameters, and starts the UI and Nimbus. Since Storm writes stateful data to disk, you may want to consider mounting an external volume for the storm.local.dir config param, and pinning Nimbus to a particular host.

It is also possible to add command line parameter to both the ui and nimbus through STORM_UI_OPTS and STORM_NIMBUS_OPTS respectadly:

STORM_NIMBUS_OPTS="-c storm.local.dir=/my/mounted/volume -c topology.mesos.worker.cpu=1.5"

You can run this from Marathon, using the example app JSON below:

{
  "id": "storm-nimbus",
  "cmd": "./bin/run-with-marathon.sh",
  "cpus": 1.0,
  "mem": 1024,
  "ports": [0, 1],
  "instances": 1,
  "container": {
    "type": "DOCKER",
    "docker": {
      "image": "mesos/storm",
      "network": "HOST",
      "forcePullImage":true
    }
  },
  "healthChecks": [
    {
      "protocol": "HTTP",
      "portIndex": 0,
      "path": "/",
      "gracePeriodSeconds": 120,
      "intervalSeconds": 20,
      "maxConsecutiveFailures": 3
    }
  ]
}

Running an example topology

Once Nimbus is running, you can launch one of the storm-starter topologies that is present in the examples/ dir of the storm release tarballs. So you'd download the appropriate version of storm to a machine with access to your storm cluster, then expand the tarball and cd into the resultant directory, from which you will run a command like the one below.

However, first you'll need to know the Thrift host and API port. In the Marathon example above, the port will be the second one assigned by Marathon. For example, if the host is 10.0.0.1 and second port is 32001, run:

$ ./bin/storm jar -c nimbus.host=10.0.0.1 -c nimbus.thrift.port=32001 examples/storm-starter/storm-starter-topologies-1.0.2.jar org.apache.storm.starter.WordCountTopology word-count

Running without Marathon

If you'd like to run the example above without Marathon, you can do so by specifying 2 required ports, the MESOS_SANDBOX path, and running the container. For example:

$ docker run -i --net=host -e PORT0=10000 -e PORT1=10001 -e MESOS_SANDBOX=/var/log/storm -t mesos/storm ./bin/run-with-marathon.sh

More Repositories

1

chronos

Fault tolerant job scheduler for Mesos which handles dependencies and ISO8601 based schedules
Scala
4,388
star
2

spark

Lightning-fast cluster computing in Java, Scala and Python.
Scala
1,426
star
3

mesos-go

Go language bindings for Apache Mesos
Go
543
star
4

mesos

PLEASE NOTE: Mesos is now hosted in Apache git! Get it using git clone https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/mesos.git
C++
417
star
5

kafka

Apache Kafka on Apache Mesos
Scala
415
star
6

elasticsearch

Elasticsearch on Mesos
Java
242
star
7

hadoop

Hadoop on Mesos
Java
176
star
8

mr-redis

Redis on Apache Mesos
Go
127
star
9

cloudfoundry-mesos

Cloud Foundry on Mesos Framework
Go
107
star
10

mesos_exporter

Prometheus Mesos Exporter
Go
104
star
11

logstash

Logstash on Mesos
Java
67
star
12

docker-compose-executor

DEPRECATED: Find the new docker compose executor here https://github.com/paypal/dce-go
Java
56
star
13

kibana

Kibana on Mesos
Shell
27
star
14

mesos-distcc

Distcc framework for Mesos.
Python
27
star
15

modules

Mesos modules examples and open source modules outside of the Apache Mesos source tree.
C++
26
star
16

cdh-mesos

Patched version of Cloudera's Distribution of Hadoop with Mesos support
Java
13
star
17

mih

Mesos-in-Hadoop: allows launching a Mesos cluster as a Hadoop job
Java
9
star
18

go-proto

Mesos protobuf bindings for Go.
Go
5
star
19

llvm

Mesos LLVM tools
Dockerfile
4
star
20

mesos-packaging

Packaging for Apache Mesos.
Shell
3
star
21

3rdparty

Collection of the 3rdparty dependencies bundled into Mesos.
3
star
22

homebrew-llvm

[DECPRECATED, USE https://github.com/mesos/llvm INSTEAD] Mesos LLVM tools for OS X
Ruby
1
star
23

mesos-rxjava

RxJava client for Apache Mesos HTTP APIs
Java
1
star