Darsync is a tool used to prepare your project for transfer to Dardel. It has two modes; check mode where it goes through your files and looks for uncompressed file formats and counts the number of files, and gen mode where it generates a script file you can submit to SLURM to do the actual data transfer.
The idea is to
- Generate SSH keys for Dardel by running this command,
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -N "" -f ~/id_ed25519_pdc
- Run the check mode and mitigate any problems problems it finds.
- Run the gen mode.
- Submit the generated script as a job.
If you know your way around Linux, here is the short version.
# load the module if need be
module load darsync
# run check
darsync check --local-dir /path/to/dir
# fix warnings on your own
# book a 30 day single core job on Snowy and run the rsync command
rsync -e "ssh -i ~/id_ed25519_pdc -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no" -acPuv /local/path/to/files/ [email protected]:/remote/path/to/files/
To initiate the check mode you run Darsync with the check argument. If you run it without any other arguments it will ask you interactive questions to get the information it needs.
# load the module if need be
module load darsync
# interactive mode
darsync check
# or give it the path to the directory to check directly
darsync check --local-dir /path/to/dir
The warnings you can get are:
It looks for files with file endings matching common uncompressed file formats, like .fq
, .sam
, .vcf
, .txt
. If the combined file size of these files are above a threshold it will trigger the warning. Most programs that uses these formats can also read the compressed version of them.
Examples of how to compress common formats:
# fastq/fq/fasta/txt
gzip file.fq
# vcf
bgzip file.vcf
# sam
samtools view -b file.sam > file.bam
# when the above command is completed successfully:
# rm file.sam
For examples on how to compress other file formats, use an internet search engine to look for
how to compress <insert file format name> file
If a project consists of many small files it will decrease the data transfer speed, as there is an overhead cost to starting and stopping each file transfer. A way around this is to pack all the small files into a single tar
archive, so that it only has to start and stop a single time.
Example of how to pack a folder and all files in it into a single tar
archive.
### on uppmax
# pack it
tar -czvf folder.tar.gz /path/to/folder
# the the command above finished without error messages and you have a folder.tar.gz file that seems about right in size,
rm -r /path/to/folder
### on dardel
# unpack it after transfer
tar -xzvf folder.tar.gz
Once you have mitigated any warnings you got you are ready to generate the SLURM script that will preform the data transfer.
To generate a transfer script you will need to supply Darsync with some information. Make sure to have this readily available:
- ID of the UPPMAX project that will run the transfer job, e.g.
naiss2099-23-99
- If you don't remember if, find the name of the project you want to transfer by looking in the list of active project in SUPR.
- Name of the UPPMAX cluster the transfer jobs should run on. Depending on if your project has allocations on
rackham
orsnowy
. - Path to the folder you want to transfer, .e.g.
/proj/naiss2099-23-999
- Either transfer your whole project, or put the files and folder your want to transfer into a new folder in your project folder and transfer that folder.
- The project's folder on UPPMAX will be located in the
/proj/
folder, most likely a folder with the same name as the project's ID,/proj/<project id>
, e.g./proj/naiss2024-23-999
. If your project has picked a custom directory name when it was created it will have that name instead of the project ID, e.g./proj/directory_name
. Check which directory name your project has by looking at the project's page in SUPR and look at the field calledDirectory name:
- Your Dardel username.
- You can see your Dardel username in SUPR
- The path on Dardel where you want to put your data, e.g.
/cfs/klemming/projects/snic/naiss2099-23-999
- Check which project ID you have for your project on Dardel in the list of active project in SUPR.
- The path to the SSH key you have prepared to be used to login from Rackham to Dardel, e.g.
~/id_ed25519_pdc
- The path to where you want to save the generated transfer script.
To initiate the gen mode you run Darsync with the gen
argument. If you run it without any other arguments it will ask you interactive questions to get the information it needs.
# load the module if need be
module load darsync
# interactive mode
darsync gen
# or give it any or all arguments directly
darsync check -l /path/to/dir/on/uppmax/ -r /path/to/dir/on/dardel/ -A naiss2099-23-99 -u dardel_username -s ~/id_ed25519_pdc -o ~/dardel_transfer_script.sh
Before you submit the generated transfer script you should make sure everything is in order. You can try to run the transfer script directly on the UPPMAX login node and see if it starts or if you get any errors:
bash ~/dardel_transfer_script.sh
If you start see progress reports from rsync
you know it works and you can press ctrl+c
to stop.
Example of how it can look when it works:
bash darsync_temp.slurm
sending incremental file list
temp/
temp/counts
10 100% 0,51kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#4, to-chk=72/77)
temp/export.sh
13 100% 0,67kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#5, to-chk=71/77)
temp/my_stuff.py
70 100% 3,60kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#7, to-chk=69/77)
temp/run.sh
52 100% 2,67kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#8, to-chk=68/77)
temp/sequence_tools.py
345 100% 17,73kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#9, to-chk=67/77)
temp/similar_sequences.txt
24 100% 1,23kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#10, to-chk=66/77)
temp/t.py
328 100% 16,86kB/s 0:00:00 (xfr#11, to-chk=65/77)
Example of how it can look when it doesn't work:
bash darsync_temp.slurm
[email protected]: Permission denied (publickey,gssapi-keyex,gssapi-with-mic).
rsync: connection unexpectedly closed (0 bytes received so far) [sender]
rsync error: unexplained error (code 255) at io.c(231) [sender=3.2.7]
Apart from getting the username or paths wrong, we foresee that the most common problem will be to get the SSH keys generated, added to the PDC login portal, and adding the UPPMAX ip/hostname as authorized for that SSH key. Please see the PDC user guide on how to set up SSH keys. Once you have your key created and added to the login portal, go to the login portal again and add the address *.uppmax.uu.se
to your key to make it work from Rackham.
If you have never created SSH keys before we have made this helper script that will do it for you. Simply run this command in a terminal that is logged into UPPMAX:
darsync sshkey
and it will create an SSH key that can be used when running Darsync. Since Darsync runs as a SLURM job, it has to be unencrypted (i.e. not require a password to use it). This is not the recommended way to store your SSH keys, so please delete this SSH key once your data transfer is completed. If you still need a SSH key on UPPMAX to connect to Dardel, please create a new one with a password and add that one to the PDC login portal, and delete the key you created for the data transfer.
rm ~/id_ed25519_pdc