HPC:Login

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Connecting to the PMACS Cluster

Currently, secure shell (SSH) is the only supported method of connecting to the cluster. The login machine name is consign.pmacs.upenn.edu You should probably add "ServerKeepAliveInterval 60" to your SSH client's configuration.

After your account is created, you can connect using your PMACS credentials.

Important Host/Server Names

  • consign.pmacs.upenn.edu : head node/login server ; Do NOT run jobs on consign
  • mercury.pmacs.upenn.edu : file transfer server and the server where home directories are initailized on First Login; Do NOT run jobs on mercury either
  • PMACS VPN

First Login

Temporary Password Change

All PMACS accounts are provisioned with a temporary password. Before you can log into the PMACS cluster for the first time, you will need to change this temporary password. Change of the temporary password and enrollment into the PMACS password reset system can be done here

Enrollment into the PMACS Password Reset system

All PMACS account passwords are set to expire every 180 days. To avoid your password from expiring and possibly preventing access to the PMACS cluster, all cluster users are encouraged to enroll into the reset system. The password reset application can be access here. Once enrolled, this system will also allow you to recover forgotten PMACS passwords and reset known/expired PMACS passwords.

Initialize your home area

  • With the newly changed password log into the file transfer host: mercury.pmacs.upenn.edu
  ssh <your_user_name>@mercury.pmacs.upenn.edu

Remember to replace <your_user_name> above with your PennKey username

  • Upon login, you will see a message similar to
 
 Creating home directory for <user_name>
  • You are now ready to start using the PMACS HPC cluster :
 
  ssh <your_user_name>@consign.pmacs.upenn.edu

Remember to replace <your_user_name> above with your PennKey username.

Please look at the PMACS HPC Users Guide for information on how to run jobs on the PMACS cluster.

Optional Section: Instructions for generating Public-Private keypairs

For added convenience and security, Public-Private Keys may be used for SSH connections to the PMACS cluster.

On Mac OS X and GNU/Linux systems, run the following command from within a terminal and follow the on-screen instructions. Please DO NOT copy-paste. Read each command and run the command on your own:

$ ssh-keygen
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key ($HOME/.ssh/id_rsa):
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.
Your public key has been saved in $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx asrini@
The key's randomart image is:
+--[ RSA 2048]----+
|          .      |
|       kjweo     |
|        x B E x  |
|         * B l + |
|        S +aser .|
|           + +   |
|          . weq  |
|           . x 12|
|            45+  |
+-----------------+

On Windows machines you can generate and use PublicKeys with Putty. Here is a link to a Youtube channel which has video tutorials for generating and using Public keys.

After generating a Public-Private keypair, copy the contents of the .ssh/id_rsa.pub file to a file named .ssh/authorized_keys in your home area on the PMACS cluster.

[$USER@consign ~]$ vim .ssh/authorized_keys

One SSH public key per line; save and close the file

Then change the permissions on the file:

[$USER@consign ~]$ chmod 600 .ssh/authorized_keys