This is the web page for Operation Systems at the University of Oklahoma.
Note. This tutorial goes through how to set up your own Google Compute Engine (GCE) instance to work on the assignments. Each student will get some credits for use during the semester. Please use the resources judiciously. Adding additional credits is a bit difficult. When you sign up for GCP the first time, you also receive some credits from Google that you can use for the course.
You will connect to the Google cloud through a terminal or shell. This is the standard way of interacting with *nix family systems. This tutorial will also help you set up your own terminal access.
The Secure SHell (SSH) provides a range of secure access tools to remote machines. For this class, we will be using it to establish a terminal (command-line) connection to your virtual machine instance.
We are using key-based authentication to your compute instances. This means that access will be linked to specific computers and accounts that you will be accessing your instance from. Also, you will not use a password for access (unless your local private key is encrypted).
Windows users can look into PuTTY and its documentation. However, I suggest that you set-up your Windows Subsystem for Linux. Doing so will allow you to follow the same instructions as the Macintosh and GNU/Linux users since most distributions of the latter mentions come with SSH already installed.
If you already have a ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
in your home (user) directory, then you are done. You can check for this file by typing:
machine@user:~$ ls ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
You may also create a key pair by running ssh-keygen
.
It is okay to use an empty passphrase, but doing so means that your private key is unencrypted (this is often okay, since it is stored on your local machine only, but is a problem if your laptop is compromised).
Create a Gmail account if you don’t already have one. You may at https://accounts.google.com. Sign into your account and point your web-browser to https://console.cloud.google.com/education. Fill out the required fields and read the terms and conditions. If you agree, go ahead and click on the blue ACCEPT AND CONTINUE button.
You may receive a verification email, follow the instructions within. At the end you can verify your credits by going to the billing menu (make sure you select the right billing account) as seen in the screenshot bellow.
You can access your virtual machine by a terminal that can be reached by pointing your web browser to https://console.cloud.google.com (make sure you are logged in). You’ll land on a dashboard page. Here you can customise your project (you need one to work on a virtual machine (VM)) or create a new one for the course.
Make sure that the billing account you redeemed your credits on is the one selected for the project as seen in the screenshot above. This is the default setting, but if you already had projects like I did from when I took the course, you’ll need to swap the billing account to the one you just redeemed credit towards.
Now click on the little terminal icon towards the top right corner, your screen will split in half et voila! you have a working shell instance.
Top left hamburger menu>Compute Engine>VM instances
.You will mostly use the defaults, but change:
Note that the f1-mico (0.6 GB 1 shared vCPU) instance will be free–it will not cost more than the free tier. You can choose a more expensive instance if you would like, but you will need to be diligent about turning it off when not in use to preserve your credits. There are several zone options, so you can choose the one where you would like your virtual instance to live. The closest zone is us-central1
. This zone is located in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Set your zone to us-central1-c
they will have the configurations we need.
Click CREATE button.
On the same edit page as discussed before, scroll down to the “SSH keys” section and click on the hyperlink “Show and edit”.
You may run cat ~/.ssh/name.pub
to print your public key to the terminal. Additionally, you may run xclip -sel clip < ~/.ssh/name.pub
to copy your public key to the clipboard.
Paste the contents into the Enter public SSH key
field. Make sure you do not paste any additional newline or other whitespace characters.
There are at least two ways to connect to your Google Cloud VM. We can use their browser interface or your own computer.
A pop-up window should appear with a terminal into your VM instance.
ssh -i PATH_TO_PRIVATE_KEY USERNAME@EXTERNAL_IP
PATH_TO_PRIVATE_KEY
is likely something like ~/.ssh/name
. If the file extension is .pub, this is your public key, not your private key.USERNAME
is the username specified in your public key. Note that this is not your Google username. E. g., your TA’s Google username is jonathan.lesslie
but the username in his public key is jmless
.EXTERNAL_IP
is the IP given in the INSTANCES list under the “External IP” column.In order to update and install necessary packages, you may consider running the following commands,
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install -y emacs vim htop tmux tree ranger glances
sudo apt install -y gcc gdb make
sudo apt install -y valgrind strace
sudo apt install -y linux-tools-common linux-tools-generic
sudo apt install -y linux-tools-`uname -r`
sudo apt install -y libcap-dev
sudo apt install -y libacl1-dev
sudo apt install -y bats zlib1g-dev zlib1g-dbg
sudo apt install -y libsqlite3-dev sqlite3 bzip2 libbz2-dev
sudo apt install -y libssl-dev openssl libgdbm-dev libgdbm-compat-dev
sudo apt install -y liblzma-dev libreadline-dev libncursesw5-dev uuid-dev
sudo apt install -y ssh evince
You might want to reboot now with sudo reboow now
.
For any help about how to set-up a VM instance or connect to it, send the TA an email. For help regarding coupon codes or information that gets you Google credits, email the professor.