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Dask Cluster objects in Saturn Cloud

Project description

dask-saturn

Python library for interacting with Dask clusters in Saturn Cloud.

Dask-Saturn mimics the API of Dask-Kubernetes, but allows the user to interact with clusters created within Saturn Cloud.

Start cluster

From within a Jupyter notebook, you can start a cluster:

from dask_saturn import SaturnCluster

cluster = SaturnCluster()
cluster

By default this will start a dask cluster with the same settings that you have already set in the Saturn UI or in a prior notebook.

To start the cluster with a certain number of workers using the n_workers option. Similarly, you can set the scheduler_size, worker_size, and worker_is_spot.

Note: If the cluster is already running then you can't change the settings. Attempting to do so will raise a warning.

Use the autoclose option to set up a cluster that is tied to the client kernel. This functions like a regular dask LocalCluster, when your jupyter kernel dies or is restarted, the dask cluster will close.

Adjust number of workers

Once you have a cluster you can interact with it via the jupyter widget, or using the scale and adapt methods.

For example, to manually scale up to 20 workers:

cluster.scale(20)

To create an adaptive cluster that controls its own scaling:

cluster.adapt(minimum=1, maximum=20)

Interact with client

To submit tasks to the cluster, you sometimes need access to the Client object. Instantiate this with the cluster as the only argument:

from distributed import Client

client = Client(cluster)
client

Close cluster

To terminate all resources associated with a cluster, use the close method:

cluster.close()

Change settings

To update the settings (such as n_workers, worker_size, worker_is_spot, nthreads) on an existing cluster, use the reset method:

cluster.reset(n_workers=3)

You can also call this without instantiating the cluster first:

cluster = SaturnCluster.reset(n_workers=3)

By default, you'll get one worker, but you can change that using the n_workers option. Similarly you can override the scheduler and worker hardware settings with scheduler_size, worker_size. You can display the available size options using describe_sizes():

>>> describe_sizes()
{'medium': 'Medium - 2 cores - 4 GB RAM',
 'large': 'Large - 2 cores - 16 GB RAM',
 'xlarge': 'XLarge - 4 cores - 32 GB RAM',
 '2xlarge': '2XLarge - 8 cores - 64 GB RAM',
 '4xlarge': '4XLarge - 16 cores - 128 GB RAM',
 '8xlarge': '8XLarge - 32 cores - 256 GB RAM',
 '12xlarge': '12XLarge - 48 cores - 384 GB RAM',
 '16xlarge': '16XLarge - 64 cores - 512 GB RAM',
 'g4dnxlarge': 'T4-XLarge - 4 cores - 16 GB RAM - 1 GPU',
 'g4dn4xlarge': 'T4-4XLarge - 16 cores - 64 GB RAM - 1 GPU',
 'g4dn8xlarge': 'T4-8XLarge - 32 cores - 128 GB RAM - 1 GPU',
 'p32xlarge': 'V100-2XLarge - 8 cores - 61 GB RAM - 1 GPU',
 'p38xlarge': 'V100-8XLarge - 32 cores - 244 GB RAM - 4 GPU',
 'p316xlarge': 'V100-16XLarge - 64 cores - 488 GB RAM - 8 GPU'}

Here's an example:

cluster = SaturnCluster(
    scheduler_size="large",
    worker_size="2xlarge",
    n_workers=3,
)
client = Client(cluster)
client

Connect from outside of Saturn

To connect to your Dask cluster from outside of Saturn, you need to set two environment variables: SATURN_TOKEN and SATURN_BASE_URL.

To get the values for these you'll need to go Saturn in your browser. Go to where you want to connect a Dask cluster. There will be a button that says: "Connect Externally". Clicking that will open a modal with the values for SATURN_TOKEN and SATURN_BASE_URL

Remember - that token is private so don't share it with anyone! It'll be a something like 351e6f2d40bf4d15a0009fc086c602df

export SATURN_BASE_URL="https://app.demo.saturnenterprise.io"
export SATURN_TOKEN="351e6f2d40bf4d15a0009fc086c602df"

After you have set the environment variables, you can open a Python session and connect to your Dask cluster just as you would inside of Saturn:

from dask_saturn import SaturnCluster
from distributed import Client

cluster = SaturnCluster()
client = Client(cluster)
client

When you are done working with the dask cluster make sure to shut it down:

cluster.close()

Sync files to workers

When working with distributed dask clusters, the workers don't have access to the same file system as your client does. So you will see files in your jupyter server that aren't available on the workers. To move files to the workers you can use the RegisterFiles plugin and call sync_files on any path that you want to update on the workers.

For instance if you have a file structure like:

/home/jovyan/project/
|---- utils/
|   |---- __init__.py
|   |---- hello.py
|
|---- Untitled.ipynb

where hello.py contains:

# utils/hello.py
def greet():
    return "Hello"

If the code in hello.py changes or you add new files to utils, you'll want to push those changes to the workers. After setting up the SaturnCluster and the Client, register the RegisterFiles plugin with the workers. Then every time you make changes to the files in utils, run sync_files. The worker plugin makes sure that any new worker that comes up will have any files that you have synced.

from dask_saturn import RegisterFiles, sync_files

client.register_worker_plugin(RegisterFiles())
sync_files(client, "utils")

# If a python script has changed, restart the workers so they will see the changes
client.restart()

# import the function and tell the workers to run it
from util.hello import greet
client.run(greet)

TIP: You can always check the state of the filesystem on your workers by running client.run(os.listdir)

Development

Create/update a dask-saturn conda environment:

make conda-update

Set environment variables to run dask-saturn with a local atlas server:

export SATURN_BASE_URL=http://dev.localtest.me:8888/
export SATURN_TOKEN=<JUPYTER_SERVER_SATURN_TOKEN>

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