⚠️ Cook Scheduler Development Has CeasedAfter seven years of developing Cook Scheduler we have made the decision to archive the project. Cook will remain available on GitHub in archive mode but no further development will occur.
When Cook was open sourced it solved difficult problems in on-premises, capacity-constrained data centers. Today, however, the embrace of the public cloud has changed the problems that need to be solved. This shift is also reflected in slowing community contribution to Cook and the emergence of many other open source projects in this space. Given this, it no longer makes sense for us to maintain Cook as an open source project.
We are thankful for the opportunity to have shared Cook with the community and grateful for your contributions. Two Sigma remains committed to supporting open source software. You can find out more about our other projects and contributions here: https://www.twosigma.com/open-source/.
Welcome to Two Sigma's Cook Scheduler!
What is Cook?
- Cook is a powerful batch scheduler, specifically designed to provide a great user experience when there are more jobs to run than your cluster has capacity for.
- Cook is able to intelligently preempt jobs to ensure that no user ever needs to wait long to get quick answers, while simultaneously helping you to achieve 90%+ utilization for massive workloads.
- Cook has been battle-hardened to automatically recover after dozens of classes of cluster failures.
- Cook can act as a Spark scheduler, and it comes with a REST API, Java client, Python client, and CLI.
Core concepts is a good place to start to learn more.
Check the changelog for release info.
In this repository, you'll find several subprojects, each of which has its own documentation.
scheduler
- This is the actual Mesos framework, Cook. It comes with a JSON REST API.jobclient
- This includes the Java and Python APIs for Cook, both of which use the REST API under the hood.spark
- This contains the patch to Spark to enable Cook as a backend.
Please visit the scheduler
subproject first to get started.
The quickest way to get Cook running locally against GKE is with Vagrant.
- Install Vagrant
- Install Virtualbox
- Clone down this repo
- Run
GCP_PROJECT_NAME=<gcp_project_name> PGPASSWORD=<random_string> vagrant up --provider=virtualbox
to create the dev environment - Run
vagrant ssh
to ssh into the dev environment
- Run
gcloud auth login
to login to Google cloud - Run
bin/make-gke-test-clusters
to create GKE clusters - Run
bin/start-datomic.sh
to start Datomic (Cook database) (Wait until "System started datomic:free://0.0.0.0:4334/, storing data in: data") - Run
lein exec -p datomic/data/seed_k8s_pools.clj $COOK_DATOMIC_URI
to seed some Cook pools in the database - Run
bin/run-local-kubernetes.sh
to start the Cook scheduler - Cook should now be listening locally on port 12321
To test a simple job submission:
- Run
cs submit --pool k8s-alpha --cpu 0.5 --mem 32 --docker-image gcr.io/google-containers/alpine-with-bash:1.0 ls
to submit a simple job - Run
cs show <job_uuid>
to show the status of your job (it should eventually show Success)
To run automated tests:
- Run
lein test :all-but-benchmark
to run unit tests - Run
cd ../integration && pytest -m 'not cli'
to run integration tests - Run
cd ../integration && pytest tests/cook/test_basic.py -k test_basic_submit -n 0 -s
to run a particular integration test
The quickest way to get Mesos and Cook running locally is with docker and minimesos.
- Install
docker
- Clone down this repo
cd scheduler
- Run
bin/build-docker-image.sh
to build the Cook scheduler image - Run
../travis/minimesos up
to start Mesos and ZooKeeper using minimesos - Run
bin/run-docker.sh
to start the Cook scheduler - Cook should now be listening locally on port 12321
In order to accept your code contributions, please fill out the appropriate Contributor License Agreement in the cla
folder and submit it to [email protected].
Apache Mesos is a trademark of The Apache Software Foundation. The Apache Software Foundation is not affiliated, endorsed, connected, sponsored or otherwise associated in any way to Two Sigma, Cook, or this website in any manner.
© Two Sigma Open Source, LLC