Running Services¶
Singularity 2.4 introduced the ability to run “container instances”, allowing you to run services (e.g. Nginx, MySQL, etc…) using Singularity. A container instance, simply put, is a persistent and isolated version of the container image that runs in the background.
Why container instances?¶
that is pretty simple, I install nginx and start the service:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y nginx
service nginx start
With older versions of Singularity, if you were to do something like this, from inside the container you would happily see the service start, and the web server running! But then if you were to log out of the container what would happen? Orphan process within unreachable namespaces! You would lose control of the process. It would still be running, but you couldn’t easily kill or interface with it. This is a called an orphan process. Singularity versions less than 2.4 were not designed to handle running services properly.
Container Instances in Singularity¶
With Singularity 2.4 and the addition of container instances, the
ability to cleanly, reliably, and safely run services in a container is
here. First, let’s put some commands that we want our instance to
execute into a script. Let’s call it a startscript
. This fits into a definition
file as follows:
%startscript
service nginx start
Now let’s say we build a container with that startscript into an image
called nginx.img
and we want to run an nginx service. All we need to do is start
the instance with the instance.start command, and the
startscript will run inside the container automatically:
[command] [image] [name of instance]
$ singularity instance.start nginx.img web
When we run that command, Singularity creates an isolated environment for the container instances’ processes/services to live inside. We can confirm that this command started an instance by running the instance.list command like so:
$ singularity instance.list
INSTANCE NAME PID CONTAINER IMAGE
web 790 /home/mibauer/nginx.img
If we want to run multiple instances from the same image, it’s as simple as running the command multiple times. The instance names are an identifier used to uniquely describe an instance, so they cannot be repeated.
$ singularity instance.start nginx.img web1
$ singularity instance.start nginx.img web2
$ singularity instance.start nginx.img web3
And again to confirm that the instances are running as we expected:
$ singularity instance.list
INSTANCE NAME PID CONTAINER IMAGE
web1 790 /home/mibauer/nginx.img
web2 791 /home/mibauer/nginx.img
web3 792 /home/mibauer/nginx.img
If the service you want to run in your instance requires a bind mount,
then you must pass the -B
option when calling instance.start
. For example, if you wish to
capture the output of the web1
container instance which is placed at /output/
inside
the container you could do:
$ singularity instance.start -B output/dir/outside/:/output/ nginx.img web1
If you want to poke around inside of your instance, you can do a normal singularity shell
command, but give it the instance URI:
$ singularity shell instance://web1
Singularity: Invoking an interactive shell within container...
Singularity pdf_server.img:~/>
Similarly, you can use the singularity run/exec
commands on instances:
$ singularity run instance://web1
$ singularity exec instance://web1 ps -ef
When using run
with an instance URI, the runscript
will be executed inside of the
instance. Similarly with exec
, it will execute the given command in the
instance.
When you are finished with your instance you can clean it up with the instance.stop command as follows:
$ singularity instance.stop web1
If you have multiple instances running and you want to stop all of them, you can do so with a wildcard or the -a flag:
$ singularity instance.stop \*
$ singularity instance.stop -a
Note
Note that you must escape the wildcard with a backslash like this \*
to
pass it properly.
Nginx “Hello-world” in Singularity¶
Let’s take a look at setting up a sample nginx web server using instances in Singularity. First we will just create a basic definition file:
Bootstrap: docker
From: nginx
Includecmd: no
%startscript
nginx
All this does is download the official nginx Docker container, convert it to a Singularity image, and tell it to run nginx when you start the instance. Since we’re running a web server, we’re going to run the following commands as root.
# singularity build nginx.img Singularity
# singularity instance.start nginx.img web1
Just like that we’ve downloaded, built, and ran an nginx Singularity image. And to confirm that it’s correctly running:
$ curl localhost
127.0.0.1 - - [06/Oct/2017:21:46:43 +0000] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 612 "-" "curl/7.47.0" "-"
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome to nginx!</title>
<style>
body {
width: 35em;
margin: 0 auto;
font-family: Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to nginx!</h1>
<p>If you see this page, the nginx web server is successfully installed and
working. Further configuration is required.</p>
<p>For online documentation and support please refer to
<a href="http://nginx.org/">nginx.org</a>.<br/>
Commercial support is available at
<a href="http://nginx.com/">nginx.com</a>.</p>
<p><em>Thank you for using nginx.</em></p>
</body>
</html>
Putting all together¶
In this section, we will demonstrate an example of packaging a service
into a container and running it. The service we will be packaging is an
API server that converts a web page into a PDF, and can be found
here. The final
example can be found here on GitHub.
If you wish to just download the final image directly from Singularity
Hub, simply run singularity pull shub://bauerm97/instance-example
.
Building the image¶
To begin, we need to build the image. When looking at the GitHub page of
the url-to-pdf-api
, we can see that it is a Node 8 server that uses headless Chromium
called Puppeteer. Let’s first choose a base from which to build our
container, in this case I used the docker image node:8
which comes
pre-installed with Node 8:
Bootstrap: docker
From: node:8
Includecmd: no
post
section as well as
the installation script for the url-to-pdf-api
:%post
apt-get update
apt-get install -yq gconf-service libasound2 libatk1.0-0 libc6 libcairo2 libcups2 \
libdbus-1-3 libexpat1 libfontconfig1 libgcc1 libgconf-2-4 libgdk-pixbuf2.0-0 \
libglib2.0-0 libgtk-3-0 libnspr4 libpango-1.0-0 libpangocairo-1.0-0 libstdc++6 \
libx11-6 libx11-xcb1 libxcb1 libxcomposite1 libxcursor1 libxdamage1 libxext6 \
libxfixes3 libxi6 libxrandr2 libxrender1 libxss1 libxtst6 ca-certificates \
fonts-liberation libappindicator1 libnss3 lsb-release xdg-utils wget curl
rm -r /var/lib/apt/lists/*
cd /
git clone https://github.com/alvarcarto/url-to-pdf-api.git pdf_server
cd pdf_server
npm install
chmod -R 0755 .
And now we need to define what happens when we start an instance of the container. In this situation, we want to run the commands that starts up the url-to-pdf-api server:
%startscript
cd /pdf_server
# Use nohup and /dev/null to completely detach server process from terminal
nohup npm start > /dev/null 2>&1 < /dev/null &
Also, the url-to-pdf-api
server requires environment
some variables be set, which we can do in the
environment section:
%environment
NODE_ENV=development
PORT=8000
ALLOW_HTTP=true
URL=localhost
export NODE_ENV PORT ALLOW_HTTP URL
Now we can build the definition file into an image! Simply run build
and the
image will be ready to go:
$ sudo singularity build url-to-pdf-api.img Singularity
Running the Server¶
Now that we have an image, we are ready to start an instance and run the server:
$ singularity instance.start url-to-pdf-api.img pdf
We can confirm it’s working by sending the server an http request using curl:
$ curl -o google.pdf localhost:8000/api/render?url=http://google.com
% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
100 51664 100 51664 0 0 12443 0 0:00:04 0:00:04 --:--:-- 12446
If you shell into the instance, you can see the running processes:
$ singularity shell instance://pdf
Singularity: Invoking an interactive shell within container...
Singularity pdf_server.img:~/bauerm97/instance-example> ps auxf
USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND
node 87 0.2 0.0 20364 3384 pts/0 S 16:16 0:00 /bin/bash --norc
node 88 0.0 0.0 17496 2144 pts/0 R+ 16:16 0:00 \_ ps auxf
node 1 0.0 0.0 13968 1904 ? Ss 16:10 0:00 singularity-instance: mibauer [pdf]
node 3 0.1 0.4 997452 40364 ? Sl 16:10 0:00 npm
node 13 0.0 0.0 4340 724 ? S 16:10 0:00 \_ sh -c nodemon --watch ./src -e j
node 14 0.0 0.4 1184492 37008 ? Sl 16:10 0:00 \_ node /scif/apps/pdf_server/p
node 26 0.0 0.0 4340 804 ? S 16:10 0:00 \_ sh -c node src/index.js
node 27 0.2 0.5 906108 43424 ? Sl 16:10 0:00 \_ node src/index.js
Singularity pdf_server.img:~/bauerm97/instance-example> ls
LICENSE README.md Singularity out pdf_server.img
Singularity pdf_server.img:~/bauerm97/instance-example> exit
Making it Pretty¶
Now that we have confirmation that the server is working, let’s make it a little cleaner. It’s difficult to remember the exact curl command and URL syntax each time you want to request a PDF, so let’s automate that. To do that, we’re going to be using Standard Container Integration Format (SCIF) apps, which are integrated directly into singularity. If you haven’t already, check out the Singularity app documentation to come up to speed.
First off, we’re going to move the installation of the url-to-pdf-api into an app, so that there is a designated spot to place output files. To do that, we want to add a section to our definition file to build the server:
%appinstall pdf_server
git clone https://github.com/alvarcarto/url-to-pdf-api.git pdf_server
cd pdf_server
npm install
chmod -R 0755 .
And update our startscript
to point to the app location:
%startscript
cd "${APPROOT_pdf_server}/pdf_server"
# Use nohup and /dev/null to completely detach server process from terminal
nohup npm start > /dev/null 2>&1 < /dev/null &
Now we want to define the pdf_client app, which we will run to send the requests to the server:
%apprun pdf_client
if [ -z "${1:-}" ]; then
echo "Usage: singularity run --app pdf <instance://name> <URL> [output file]"
exit 1
fi
curl -o "${SINGULARITY_APPDATA}/output/${2:-output.pdf}" "${URL}:${PORT}/api/render?url=${1}"
As you can see, the pdf_client
app checks to make sure that the user provides at
least one argument. Now that we have an output directory in the
container, we need to expose it to the host using a bind mount. Once
we’ve rebuilt the container, make a new directory callout out
for the
generated PDF’s to go. Now we simply start the instance like so:
$ singularity instance.start -B out/:/scif/data/pdf_client/output/ url-to-pdf-api.img pdf
And to request a pdf simply do:
$ singularity run --app pdf_client instance://pdf http://google.com google.pdf
And to confirm that it worked:
$ ls out/
google.pdf
When you are finished, use the instance.stop command to close all running instances.
$ singularity instance.stop \*
Important Notes¶
Note
The instances are linked with your user. So if you start an instance
with sudo, that is going to go under root, and you will need to call sudo singularity instance.list
in order to see it.