We introduced how to create a PaddlePaddle Job with a single node on Kuberentes in the
previous document.
In this article, we will introduce how to create a PaddlePaddle job with multiple nodes
on Kubernetes cluster.
## Overall Architecture
Before creating a training job, the users need to slice the training data and deploy
the Python scripts along with it into the distributed file system
(We can use the different type of Kuberentes Volumes to mount different distributed
file systems). Before training starts, The program will copy the training data into the
Container and also save the models at the same path during training. The global architecture
is as follows:
![PaddlePaddle on Kubernetes Architecture](src/k8s-paddle-arch.png)
The above figure describes a distributed training architecture which contains 3 nodes, each
Pod mounts a folder of the distributed file system to save training data and models
by Kubernetes Volume. Kubernetes created 3 Pods for this training phase and scheduled these on
3 nodes, each Pod has a PaddlePaddle container. After the containers car created,
PaddlePaddle starts up the communication between PServer and Trainer and read training
data for this training job.
As the description above, we can start up a PaddlePaddle distributed training job on a
Kubernetes ready cluster with the following steps:
1.[Build PaddlePaddle Docker Image](#Build a Docker Image)
1.[Split training data and upload to the distributed file system](#Upload Training Data)
1.[Edit a YAML file and create a Kubernetes Job](#Create a Job)
1.[Check the output](#Check The Output)
We will introduce these steps as follows:
### Build a Docker Image
Training docker image needs to package the paddle pserver and paddle trainer runtimes, as well as two more processes before we can kick off the training:
- Copying the training data into container.
- Generating the initialization arguments for `Paddle PServer` and `Paddle Training` processes.
Since the paddlepaddle official docker image already has the runtimes we need, we'll take it as the base image and pack some additional scripts for the processes mentioned above to build our training image. for more detail, please find from the following link:
And then upload the new Docker Image to a Docker hub:
```bash
docker push [YOUR_REPO]/paddle:mypaddle
```
**[NOTE]**, in the above command arguments, `[YOUR_REPO]` represents your Docker repository,
you need to use your repository instead of it. We will replace it with your respository name to
represent the Docker Image which built in this step.
### Prepare Training Data
We can download and split the training job by creating a Kubernetes Job, or custom your image
by editing [k8s_train](./src/k8s_train/).
Before creating a Job, we need to bind a [persistenVolumeClaim](https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes) by the different type of
the different file system, the generated dataset would be saved on this volume.
```yaml
apiVersion:batch/v1
kind:Job
metadata:
name:paddle-data
spec:
template:
metadata:
name:pi
spec:
hostNetwork:true
containers:
-name:paddle-data
image:paddlepaddle/paddle-tutorial:k8s_data
imagePullPolicy:Always
volumeMounts:
-mountPath:"/mnt"
name:nfs
env:
-name:OUT_DIR
value:/home/work/mfs/paddle-cluster-job
-name:SPLIT_COUNT
value:"3"
volumes:
-name:nfs
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName:mfs
restartPolicy:Never
```
Create the Job with the following command:
```bash
> kubectl create -f xxx.yaml
```
If created successfully, you can see some information like this:
```base
[root@paddle-kubernetes-node0 nfsdir]$ tree -d
.
`-- paddle-cluster-job
|-- 0
| `-- data
|-- 1
| `-- data
|-- 2
| `-- data
|-- output
|-- quick_start
```
The `paddle-cluster-job` above is the job name for this training job; we need 3
PaddlePaddle training nodes and save the split training data in `paddle-cluster-job` path,
the folder `0`, `1` and `2` represents the `training_id` on each node, `quick_start` folder is used to store training data, `output` folder is used to store the models and logs.
### Create a Job
Kubernetes allow users to create objects with YAML files, and we can use a command-line tool
to create it.
The Job YAML file describes that which Docker Image would be used in this training job, how much nodes would be created, what's the startup arguments of `Paddle PServer/Trainer` process and what's the type of Volumes. You can find the details of the YAML filed in
And then query the status of all the other Pods of this Job by the function `getPodList()`, and fetch `triner_id` by the function `getIdMap(podlist)` if all the Pods status is `RUNNING`.
```python
podlist=getPodList()
# need to wait until all pods are running
whilenotisPodAllRunning(podlist):
time.sleep(10)
podlist=getPodList()
idMap=getIdMap(podlist)
```
**NOTE**: `getPodList()` would prefetch all the Pods in the current namespace, if some
Pods are alreay running, it may cause some error. We will use [statfulesets](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/abstractions/controllers/statefulsets) instead of
Kubernetes Pod or Replicaset in the future.
The function `getIdMap(podlist)` fetches IPs addresses of `podlist` and then sort them
to generate `trainer_id`.
```python
defgetIdMap(podlist):
'''
generate tainer_id by ip
'''
ips=[]
forpodinpodlist["items"]:
ips.append(pod["status"]["podIP"])
ips.sort()
idMap={}
foriinrange(len(ips)):
idMap[ips[i]]=i
returnidMap
```
After getting the `idMap`, we can generate the arguments of `Paddle PServer` and `Paddle Trainer`
so that we can start up them by `startPaddle(idMap, train_args_dict)`.
### Create Job
The main goal of `startPaddle` is generating the arguments of `Paddle PServer` and
`Paddle Trainer` processes. Take `Paddle Trainer` as an example, we parse the
environment variable and then get `PADDLE_NIC`, `PADDLE_PORT`, `PADDLE_PORTS_NUM` and etc...,
finally find `trainerId` from `idMap` according to its IP address.