Installing Singularity¶
This section will guide you through the process of installing Singularity 3.8.0 via several different methods. (For instructions on installing earlier versions of Singularity please see earlier versions of the docs.)
Installation on Linux¶
Singularity can be installed on any modern Linux distribution, on bare-metal or inside a Virtual Machine. Nested installations inside containers are not recommended, and require the outer container to be run with full privilege.
System Requirements¶
Singularity requires ~140MiB disk space once compiled and installed.
There are no specific CPU or memory requirements at runtime, though 2GB of RAM is recommended when building from source.
Full functionality of Singularity requires that the kernel supports:
OverlayFS mounts - (minimum kernel >=3.18) Required for full flexiblity in bind mounts to containers, and to support persistent overlays for writable containers.
Unprivileged user namespaces - (minimum kernel >=3.8, >=3.18 recommended) Required to run containers without root or setuid privilege.
RHEL & CentOS 6 do not support these features, but Singularity can be used with some limitations.
Filesystem support / limitations¶
Singularity supports most filesystems, but there are some limitations when installing Singularity on, or running containers from, common parallel / network filesystems. In general:
We strongly recommend installing Singularity on local disk on each compute node.
If Singularity is installed to a network location, a
--localstatedir
should be provided on each node, and Singularity configured to use it.The
--localstatedir
filesystem should support overlay mounts.
TMPDIR
/SINGULARITY_TMPDIR
should be on a local filesystem wherever possible.
Note
Set the --localstatedir
location by by providing
--localstatedir my/dir
as an option when you configure your
Singularity build with ./mconfig
.
Disk usage at the --localstatedir
location is neglible
(<1MiB). The directory is used as a location to mount the container
root filesystem, overlays, bind mounts etc. that construct the
runtime view of a container. You will not see these mounts from a
host shell, as they are made in a separate mount namespace.
Overlay support¶
Various features of Singularity, such as the --writable-tmpfs
and
--overlay
, options use the Linux overlay
filesystem driver to
construct a container root filesystem that combines files from
different locations. Not all filesystems can be used with the
overlay
driver, so when containers are run from these filesystems
some Singularity features may not be available.
Overlay support has two aspects:
lowerdir
support for a filesystem allows a directory on that filesystem to act as the ‘base’ of a container. A filesystem must support overlaylowerdir
for you be able to run a Singularity sandbox container on it, while using functionality such as--writable-tmpfs
/--overlay
.
upperdir
support for a filesystem allows a directory on that filesystem to be merged on top of alowerdir
to construct a container. If you use the--overlay
option to overlay a directory onto a container, then the filesystem holding the overlay directory must supportupperdir
.
Note that any overlay limitations mainly apply to sandbox (directory)
containers only. A SIF container is mounted into the
--localstatedir
location, which should generally be on a local
filesystem that supports overlay.
Fakeroot / (sub)uid/gid mapping¶
When Singularity is run using the fakeroot option it creates a user namespace for the container, and UIDs / GIDs in that user namepace are mapped to different host UID / GIDs.
Most local filesystems (ext4/xfs etc.) support this uid/gid mapping in a user namespace.
Most network filesystems (NFS/Lustre/GPFS etc.) do not support this uid/gid mapping in a user namespace. Because the fileserver is not aware of the mappings it will deny many operations, with ‘permission denied’ errors. This is currently a generic problem for rootless container runtimes.
Singularity cache / atomic rename¶
Singularity will cache SIF container images generated from remote
sources, and any OCI/docker layers used to create them. The cache is
created at $HOME/.singularity/cache
by default. The location of
the cache can be changed by setting the SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR
environment variable.
The directory used for SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR
should be:
A unique location for each user. Permissions are set on the cache so that private images cached for one user are not exposed to another. This means that
SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR
cannot be shared.Located on a filesystem with sufficient space for the number and size of container images anticipated.
Located on a filesystem that supports atomic rename, if possible.
In Singularity version 3.6 and above the cache is concurrency safe.
Parallel runs of Singularity that would create overlapping cache
entries will not conflict, as long as the filesystem used by
SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR
supports atomic rename operations.
Support for atomic rename operations is expected on local POSIX filesystems, but varies for network / parallel filesystems and may be affected by topology and configuration. For example, Lustre supports atomic rename of files only on a single MDT. Rename on NFS is only atomic to a single client, not across systems accessing the same NFS share.
If you are not certain that your $HOME
or SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR
filesytems support atomic rename, do not run Singularity in parallel
using remote container URLs. Instead use singularity pull
to
create a local SIF image, and then run this SIF image in a parallel
step. An alternative is to use the --disable-cache
option, but
this will result in each Singularity instance independently fetching
the container from the remote source, into a temporary location.
NFS¶
NFS filesystems support overlay mounts as a lowerdir
only, and do not
support user-namespace (sub)uid/gid mapping.
Containers run from SIF files located on an NFS filesystem do not have restrictions.
You cannot use
--overlay mynfsdir/
to overlay a directory onto a container when the overlay (upperdir) directory is on an NFS filesystem.When using
--fakeroot
to build or run a container, yourTMPDIR
/SINGULARITY_TMPDIR
should not be set to an NFS location.You should not run a sandbox container with
--fakeroot
from an NFS location.
Lustre / GPFS¶
Lustre and GPFS do not have sufficient upperdir
or lowerdir
overlay support for certain Singularity features, and do not support
user-namespace (sub)uid/gid mapping.
You cannot use
-overlay
or--writable-tmpfs
with a sandbox container that is located on a Lustre or GPFS filesystem. SIF containers on Lustre / GPFS will work correctly with these options.You cannot use
--overlay
to overlay a directory onto a container, when the overlay (upperdir) directory is on a Lustre or GPFS filesystem.When using
--fakeroot
to build or run a container, yourTMPDIR/SINGULARITY_TMPDIR
should not be a Lustre or GPFS location.You should not run a sandbox container with
--fakeroot
from a Lustre or GPFS location.
Before you begin¶
If you have an earlier version of Singularity installed, you should remove it before executing the installation commands. You will also need to install some dependencies and install Go.
Install from Source¶
To use the latest version of Singularity from GitHub you will need to build and install it from source. This may sound daunting, but the process is straightforward, and detailed below:
Install Dependencies¶
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux or CentOS install the following dependencies:
$ sudo yum update -y && \
sudo yum groupinstall -y 'Development Tools' && \
sudo yum install -y \
openssl-devel \
libuuid-devel \
libseccomp-devel \
wget \
squashfs-tools \
cryptsetup
On Ubuntu or Debian install the following dependencies:
$ sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y \
build-essential \
uuid-dev \
libgpgme-dev \
squashfs-tools \
libseccomp-dev \
wget \
pkg-config \
git \
cryptsetup-bin
Note
You can build Singularity (3.5+) without cryptsetup
available, but will
not be able to use encrypted containers without it installed on your system.
Install Go¶
Singularity v3 is written primarily in Go, and you will need Go 1.13 or above installed to compile it from source.
This is one of several ways to install and configure Go.
Note
If you have previously installed Go from a download, rather than an
operating system package, you should remove your go
directory,
e.g. rm -r /usr/local/go
before installing a newer
version. Extracting a new version of Go over an existing
installation can lead to errors when building Go programs, as it
may leave old files, which have been removed or replaced in newer
versions.
Visit the Go download page and pick a package
archive to download. Copy the link address and download with wget. Then extract
the archive to /usr/local
(or use other instructions on go installation
page).
$ export VERSION=1.14.12 OS=linux ARCH=amd64 && \
wget https://dl.google.com/go/go$VERSION.$OS-$ARCH.tar.gz && \
sudo tar -C /usr/local -xzvf go$VERSION.$OS-$ARCH.tar.gz && \
rm go$VERSION.$OS-$ARCH.tar.gz
Then, set up your environment for Go.
$ echo 'export GOPATH=${HOME}/go' >> ~/.bashrc && \
echo 'export PATH=/usr/local/go/bin:${PATH}:${GOPATH}/bin' >> ~/.bashrc && \
source ~/.bashrc
Download Singularity from a release¶
You can download Singularity from one of the releases. To see a full list, visit the GitHub release page. After deciding on a release to install, you can run the following commands to proceed with the installation.
$ export VERSION=3.8.0 && # adjust this as necessary \
wget https://github.com/hpcng/singularity/releases/download/v${VERSION}/singularity-${VERSION}.tar.gz && \
tar -xzf singularity-${VERSION}.tar.gz && \
cd singularity
Checkout Code from Git¶
The following commands will install Singularity from the GitHub repo to /usr/local
. This
method will work for >=v3.8.0. To install an older
tagged release see older versions of the docs.
When installing from source, you can decide to install from either a tag, a release branch, or from the master branch.
tag: GitHub tags form the basis for releases, so installing from a tag is the same as downloading and installing a specific release. Tags are expected to be relatively stable and well-tested.
release branch: A release branch represents the latest version of a minor release with all the newest bug fixes and enhancements (even those that have not yet made it into a point release). For instance, to install v3.2 with the latest bug fixes and enhancements checkout
release-3.2
. Release branches may be less stable than code in a tagged point release.master branch: The
master
branch contains the latest, bleeding edge version of Singularity. This is the default branch when you clone the source code, so you don’t have to check out any new branches to install it. Themaster
branch changes quickly and may be unstable.
To ensure that the Singularity source code is downloaded to the appropriate directory use these commands.
$ git clone https://github.com/hpcng/singularity.git && \
cd singularity && \
git checkout v3.8.0
Compile Singularity¶
Singularity uses a custom build system called makeit
. mconfig
is called to generate a Makefile
and then make
is used to
compile and install.
To support the SIF image format, automated networking setup etc., and
older Linux distributions without user namespace support, Singularity
must be make install``ed as root or with ``sudo
, so it can install
the libexec/singularity/bin/starter-setuid
binary with root
ownership and setuid permissions for privileged operations. If you
need to install as a normal user, or do not want to use setuid
functionality see below.
$ ./mconfig && \
make -C ./builddir && \
sudo make -C ./builddir install
By default Singularity will be installed in the /usr/local
directory hierarchy. You can specify a custom directory with the
--prefix
option, to mconfig
like so:
$ ./mconfig --prefix=/opt/singularity
This option can be useful if you want to install multiple versions of Singularity, install a personal version of Singularity on a shared system, or if you want to remove Singularity easily after installing it.
For a full list of mconfig
options, run mconfig --help
. Here
are some of the most common options that you may need to use when
building Singularity from source.
--sysconfdir
: Install read-only config files in sysconfdir. This option is important if you need thesingularity.conf
file or other configuration files in a custom location.--localstatedir
: Set the state directory where containers are mounted. This is a particularly important option for administrators installing Singularity on a shared file system. The--localstatedir
should be set to a directory that is present on each individual node.-b
: Build Singularity in a given directory. By default this is./builddir
.
Unprivileged (non-setuid) Installation¶
If you need to install Singularity as a non-root user, or do not wish
to allow the use of a setuid root binary, you can configure
singularity with the --without-suid
option to mconfig:
$ ./mconfig --without-suid --prefix=/home/dave/singularity && \
make -C ./builddir && \
make -C ./builddir install
If you have already installed Singularity you can disable the setuid
flow by setting the option allow setuid = no
in
etc/singularity/singularity.conf
within your installation
directory.
When singularity does not use setuid all container execution will use a user namespace. This requires support from your operating system kernel, and imposes some limitations on functionality. You should review the requirements and limitations in the user namespace section of this guide.
Source bash completion file¶
To enjoy bash shell completion with Singularity commands and options, source the bash completion file:
$ . /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/singularity
Add this command to your ~/.bashrc file so that bash completion continues to work in new shells. (Adjust the path if you installed Singularity to a different location.)
Build and install an RPM¶
If you use RHEL, CentOS or SUSE, building and installing a Singularity RPM allows your Singularity installation be more easily managed, upgraded and removed. In Singularity >=v3.0.1 you can build an RPM directly from the release tarball.
Note
Be sure to download the correct asset from the GitHub releases page. It should be named singularity-<version>.tar.gz.
After installing the dependencies and installing Go as detailed above, you are ready to download the tarball and build and install the RPM.
$ export VERSION=3.8.0 && # adjust this as necessary \
wget https://github.com/hpcng/singularity/releases/download/v${VERSION}/singularity-${VERSION}.tar.gz && \
rpmbuild -tb singularity-${VERSION}.tar.gz && \
sudo rpm -ivh ~/rpmbuild/RPMS/x86_64/singularity-$VERSION-1.el7.x86_64.rpm && \
rm -rf ~/rpmbuild singularity-$VERSION*.tar.gz
If you encounter a failed dependency error for golang but installed it from source, build with this command:
rpmbuild -tb --nodeps singularity-${VERSION}.tar.gz
Options to mconfig
can be passed using the familiar syntax to
rpmbuild
. For example, if you want to force the local state
directory to /mnt
(instead of the default /var
) you can do the
following:
rpmbuild -tb --define='_localstatedir /mnt' singularity-$VERSION.tar.gz
Note
It is very important to set the local state directory to a directory that physically exists on nodes within a cluster when installing Singularity in an HPC environment with a shared file system.
Build an RPM from Git source¶
Alternatively, to build an RPM from a branch of the Git repository you
can clone the repository, directly make
an rpm, and use it to install
Singularity:
$ ./mconfig && \
make -C builddir rpm && \
sudo rpm -ivh ~/rpmbuild/RPMS/x86_64/singularity-3.8.0.el7.x86_64.rpm # or whatever version you built
To build an rpm with an alternative install prefix set RPMPREFIX
on the make step, for example:
$ make -C builddir rpm RPMPREFIX=/usr/local
For finer control of the rpmbuild process you may wish to use make
dist
to create a tarball that you can then build into an rpm with
rpmbuild -tb
as above.
Remove an old version¶
In a standard installation of Singularity 3.0.1 and beyond (when
building from source), the command sudo make install
lists all the
files as they are installed. You must remove all of these files and
directories to completely remove Singularity.
$ sudo rm -rf \
/usr/local/libexec/singularity \
/usr/local/var/singularity \
/usr/local/etc/singularity \
/usr/local/bin/singularity \
/usr/local/bin/run-singularity \
/usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/singularity
If you anticipate needing to remove Singularity, it might be easier to
install it in a custom directory using the --prefix
option to
mconfig
. In that case Singularity can be uninstalled simply by
deleting the parent directory. Or it may be useful to install
Singularity using a package manager so that it
can be updated and/or uninstalled with ease in the future.
Distribution packages of Singularity¶
Note
Packaged versions of Singularity in Linux distribution repos are maintained by community members. They may be older releases of Singularity, as it can take time to package and distribute new versions. For the latest upstream versions of Singularity it is recommended that you build from source using one of the methods detailed above.
Install the CentOS/RHEL package using yum¶
The EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux) repos contain Singularity rpms that are regularly updated. To install Singularity from the epel repos, first install the epel-release package and then install Singularity. For instance, on CentOS 6/7/8 do the following:
$ sudo yum update -y && \
sudo yum install -y epel-release && \
sudo yum update -y && \
sudo yum install -y singularity
Testing & Checking the Build Configuration¶
After installation you can perform a basic test of Singularity functionality by executing a simple container from the Sylabs Cloud library:
$ singularity exec library://alpine cat /etc/alpine-release
3.9.2
See the user guide for more information about how to use Singularity.
singularity buildcfg¶
Running singularity buildcfg
will show the build configuration of
an installed version of Singularity, and lists the paths used by
Singularity. Use singularity buildcfg
to confirm paths are set
correctly for your installation, and troubleshoot any ‘not-found’
errors at runtime.
$ singularity buildcfg
PACKAGE_NAME=singularity
PACKAGE_VERSION=3.8.0
BUILDDIR=/home/dtrudg/Sylabs/Git/singularity/builddir
PREFIX=/usr/local
EXECPREFIX=/usr/local
BINDIR=/usr/local/bin
SBINDIR=/usr/local/sbin
LIBEXECDIR=/usr/local/libexec
DATAROOTDIR=/usr/local/share
DATADIR=/usr/local/share
SYSCONFDIR=/usr/local/etc
SHAREDSTATEDIR=/usr/local/com
LOCALSTATEDIR=/usr/local/var
RUNSTATEDIR=/usr/local/var/run
INCLUDEDIR=/usr/local/include
DOCDIR=/usr/local/share/doc/singularity
INFODIR=/usr/local/share/info
LIBDIR=/usr/local/lib
LOCALEDIR=/usr/local/share/locale
MANDIR=/usr/local/share/man
SINGULARITY_CONFDIR=/usr/local/etc/singularity
SESSIONDIR=/usr/local/var/singularity/mnt/session
Note that the LOCALSTATEDIR
and SESSIONDIR
should be on local,
non-shared storage.
The list of files installed by a successful setuid installation of Singularity can be found in the appendix, installed files section.
Test Suite¶
The Singularity codebase includes a test suite that is run during development using CI services.
If you would like to run the test suite locally you can run the test
targets from the builddir
directory in the source tree:
make check
runs source code linting and dependency checks
make unit-test
runs basic unit tests
make integration-test
runs integration tests
make e2e-test
runs end-to-end tests, which exercise a large number of operations by calling the singularity CLI with different execution profiles.
Note
Running the full test suite requires a docker
installation,
and nc
in order to test docker and instance/networking
functionality.
Singularity must be installed in order to run the full
test suite, as it must run the CLI with setuid privilege for the
starter-suid
binary.
Warning
sudo
privilege is required to run the full tests, and you
should not run the tests on a production system. We recommend
running the tests in an isolated development or build
environment.
Installation on Windows or Mac¶
Linux container runtimes like Singularity cannot run natively on Windows or Mac because of basic incompatibilities with the host kernel. (Contrary to a popular misconception, MacOS does not run on a Linux kernel. It runs on a kernel called Darwin originally forked from BSD.)
For this reason, the Singularity community maintains a set of Vagrant Boxes via Vagrant Cloud, one of Hashicorp’s open source tools. The current versions can be found under the sylabs organization.
Sylabs has also developed a beta version of Singularity Desktop for Mac, which runs Singularity in a lightweight virtual machine, in a transparent manner.
Mac¶
To use Singularity Desktop for macOS (Beta Preview):
Download a Mac installer package here.
Singularity is also available via Vagrant (installable with Homebrew or manually) or with the Singularity Desktop for macOS (Alpha Preview).
To use Vagrant via Homebrew:
$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
$ brew install --cask virtualbox && \
brew install --cask vagrant && \
brew install --cask vagrant-manager
Singularity Vagrant Box¶
Run Git Bash (Windows) or open a terminal (Mac) and create and enter a directory to be used with your Vagrant VM.
$ mkdir vm-singularity && \
cd vm-singularity
If you have already created and used this folder for another VM, you will need to destroy the VM and delete the Vagrantfile.
$ vagrant destroy && \
rm Vagrantfile
Then issue the following commands to bring up the Virtual Machine. (Substitute a
different value for the $VM
variable if you like.)
$ export VM=sylabs/singularity-3.7-ubuntu-bionic64 && \
vagrant init $VM && \
vagrant up && \
vagrant ssh
You can check the installed version of Singularity with the following:
vagrant@vagrant:~$ singularity version
3.8.0
Of course, you can also start with a plain OS Vagrant box as a base and then install Singularity using one of the above methods for Linux.