Data Access: Storage Locations and Butler¶
This document describes the file systems available at the LSST Data Facility.
Storage Locations¶
- Personal space:
Home directory space is available at /sdf/home/<first_letter_of_account>/<account> - standard S3DF personal allocation (25 GB)
Rubin-allocated space: /sdf/group/rubin/u/<account_name> with a 1 TB quota
- Science data under /sdf/group/rubin/:
datasets/
lsstdata/offline/ (still in prep)
repo/
g/shared/data/{test,validation}_data - daily updated checkouts of git lfs repos for use in testing code
ncsa_home - copy of NCSA home directories (in prep, setting permissions)
ncsa_jhome - copy of NCSA RSP home directories (in prep, setting permissions)
- Shared stack builds
/sdf/group/rubin/sw/
- Interim while NCSA data is being placed at SLAC
SDF Lustre is separate from s3df filesystems. Access the Lustre filesystem via
/fs/ddn/sdf/
to access your SDF home directories, sandbox and scratch filesdatasets and repo/main are read-only, with the exception of repo/main_20220411, which is live and in use for HSC reprocessing
Butler access¶
The primary Butler repos are located at /sdf/group/rubin/repo/main_20210215
and /sdf/group/rubin/repo/dc2_20210215
.
They can also be accessed via aliases /repo/main
and /repo/dc2
.
The USDF butler Registry can be accessed at usdf-butler.slac.stanford.edu
.
As of this writing, authentication is by a single account and password. It will be set up for you automatically once you log in to RSP once, creating a .lsst/postgres-credentials.txt file.
Data Transfer Tools¶
SLAC supports bbcp and Globus. For now, see the s3df documentation:
https://s3df.slac.stanford.edu/public/doc/#/data-transfer
(it is expected that the s3df endpoint will be established close to Aug 15)
Data compression¶
To reduce space usage in your home directory, an option for files that are not in active use is to compress them. The gzip utility can be used for file compression and decompression. Another alternative is bzip2, which usually yields a better compression ratio than gzip but takes longer to complete. Additionally, files that are typically used together can first be combined into a single file and then compressed using the tar utility.
Examples¶
Compress a file largefile.dat
using gzip:
gzip largefile.dat
The original file is replaced by a compressed file named largefile.dat.gz
.
To decompress the file:
gunzip largefile.dat.gz
Alternatively:
gzip -d largefile.dat.gz
To combine the contents of a subdirectory named largedir
and compress it:
tar -zcvf largedir.tgz largedir
The convention is to use extension .tgz
in the file name.
Note
If the files to be combined are in your home
directory and you are close to the quota, you can create the tar
file in the scratch
directory (since the tar command may fail prior to completion if you go over quota):
tar -zcvf ~/scratch/largedir.tgz largedir
To extract the contents of the compressed tar file:
tar -zxvf largedir.tgz
Note
ASCII text and binary files like executables can yield good compression ratios. Image file formats (gif, jpg, png, etc.) are already natively compressed so further compression will not yield much gains. Depending on the size of the files, the compression utilities can be compute intensive and take a while to complete. Use the compute nodes via a batch job for compressing large files. With gzip, the file is replaced by one with the extension .gz. When using tar` the individual files remain — these can be deleted to conserve space once the compressed tar file is created successfully. Use of tar and compression could also make data transfers between the Campus Cluster and other resources more efficient.