Python interface to the Xenon middleware library, v. 3.0. Xenon provides a simple programming interface to various pieces of software that can be used to access distributed compute and storage resources.
Underneath it uses GRPC, to connect to the Xenon-GRPC service. We've taken care to mirror the original Java API in this Python module as much as possible.
Clone this repository, and do:
pip install .
The code will appear on PyPI when it is ready for release.
The compiled documentation is hosted on Read the Docs. This includes a quick-start guide.
import xenon
from pathlib import Path
import os
xenon.init()
# create a new job scheduler, using SSH to localhost to submit new jobs.
with xenon.Scheduler.create(
adaptor='ssh', location='localhost') as scheduler:
# make a new job description. The executable must already be present on
# the target host.
target = Path('.') / 'stdout.txt'
desc = xenon.JobDescription(
executable='hostname',
stdout=str(target.resolve()))
# submit a job
job = scheduler.submit_batch_job(desc)
status = scheduler.wait_until_done(job, 1000)
# read the standard output of the job. We can do this directly because
# we ran on localhost, otherwise, we need to transfer the file first.
with open(target) as f:
print(f.read())
PyXenon ships with the Xenon-GRPC jar-file and command-line executable. If
these need upgrading, build them manually, following instructions at
Xenon-GRPC, and place the contents of the
build/install/xenon-grpc-shadow
folder (lib
and bin
) here.
To generate the GRPC code, run scripts/protoc.sh
from the project root.
In the xenon-grpc
repository, run:
./gradlew shadowJar
The updated JAR file will be located in ./build/libs/xenon-grpc-${version}.jar
.
Also make sure to copy updated binary files from ./build/install/xenon-grpc/bin
.
The target files should go to the ./bin
and ./lib
folders in the pyxenon
repository.
Update ./xenon/versions.py
.
To update the GRPC Python bindings, run the ./scripts/protoc.sh
script.
To update the Xenon adaptor documentation, first pip install --upgrade .
, then run python ./scripts/print_adaptor_docs.py > docs/adaptors.rst
.
Run tox
before pushing anything back to github.
Unit tests all run against the local scheduler and the file adaptor for filesystems. To run them, just do:
$ pytest ./tests
For faster testing it may be useful to start the xenon-grpc
daemon
manually; start it in a separate terminal as it may give useful output for
debugging.
For integration testing, run the following docker container to test against remote slurm
docker run --detach --publish 10022:22 nlesc/xenon-slurm:17
An example of some code running against this container is in
examples/tutorial.py
.
Contributions can be made using GitHub pull requests. To add a feature, first install the test requirements
pip install -U tox
and then run
tox
until all tests succeed. The command checks against flake8 code standards and syntax errors on Python 3.5 and 3.6. Then commit, to make sure the change didn't break any code. The pull request will be evaluated in Travis.