Machine/bender

Hostnames

  • bender.sugarlabs.org

Hardware

  • HPE ProLiant DL360 Gen10 1RU server
    • Dual socket, current configuration has one CPU
  • Xeon Gold 5218R
    • 20 cores/40 threads
    • 2.1GHz base frequency, 4.0GHz max turbo frequency
    • 27.5MB of cache
  • 64GB RAM
  • 2TB NVMe SSD
  • Ubuntu 20.04.2 LTS

Info

Owned by Sugar Labs, Inc. Hosted by Sonic in Santa Rosa, CA

Bender and Papert are two twin KVM hosts bought by Sugar Labs in 2021.

Admins

Hosting

Hosted by Sonic in Santa Rosa CA

Network configuration

Network configuration is managed via netplan. To modify, do:

vi /etc/netplan/bender.yaml
netplan generate
netplan apply

IPv4

Bender is globally accessible through a public, static IPv4 address

Sonic assigned a /28 network to Sugar Labs. IP assignments are managed in our DNS configuration. Search for "Sonic IP pool" in masters/sugarlabs.org.zone.

Usable IPv4 addresses: 192.184.220.210 ~ 192.184.220.222 (13 addresses) Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.240 Default Gateway: 192.184.220.209 DNS: 8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4

IPv6

IPv6 configuration is a bit weird.

* Public block: 2001:5a8:601:f::/64
* Sonic gateway: 2001:5a8:5:3a::15:0/127
* Transport IP: 2001:5a8:5:3a::15:1/127

The gateway is configured to route all traffic for our netblock to the transport IP, which is currently assigned to bender.

Bridges

The br0 bridge is created at startup and shared with the virtual machines hosted on Bender. It gives the VMs unfiltered access to the external network. There's no DHCP, all machines must define a static IP configuration, taking care not to stomp onto each other.

There is also a virbr0 bridge created by libvirt on startup from /etc/libvirt/qemu/networks/default.xml. This is a NAT interface and is not meant for VMs directly serving on the Internet.

Guests simply need to be configured to accept IPv6 routing advertisements. The DNS must be assigned manually.

Virtualization

Virtual machines are KVM guests managed with libvirt.

Storage

All virtual disks come from a pool backed by the main LVM VG:

 virsh # pool-define-as nvme-pool logical --source-name nvme-pool 
 Pool nvme-pool defined
 
 virsh # pool-start nvme-pool
 Pool nvme-pool started
 
 virsh # pool-autostart nvme-pool
 Pool nvme-pool marked as autostarted
 
 virsh # pool-info nvme-pool
 Name:           nvme-pool
 UUID:           5812819f-b8bf-484e-98fb-2e100fe83df2
 State:          running
 Persistent:     yes
 Autostart:      yes
 Capacity:       1.64 TiB
 Allocation:     250.00 GiB
 Available:      1.40 TiB

Disks assigned to VMs will appear here:

virsh # vol-list nvme-pool
 Name         Path
-----------------------------------------
 aslo1-root   /dev/nvme-pool/aslo1-root
 aslo1-srv    /dev/nvme-pool/aslo1-srv
 backup       /dev/nvme-pool/backup

Disks can be created, listed and deleted using the vol-* commands:

 virsh # vol-create-as nvme-pool testvm-root 20G
 Vol testvm-root created
 
 virsh # vol-info testvm-root --pool nvme-pool
 Name:           testvm-root
 Type:           block
 Capacity:       20.00 GiB
 Allocation:     20.00 GiB
 
 virsh # vol-delete testvm-root --pool nvme-pool
 Vol testvm-root deleted

Please avoid allocating large VM volumes as image file within the host's root filesystem: they're slow and hard to manage. It's ok to use images for test VMs.