1 / 16

DEISA perspectives Workshop on Biomedical informatics, Brussels, March 18-19 2004

DEISA perspectives Workshop on Biomedical informatics, Brussels, March 18-19 2004. Victor Alessandrini www.deisa.org. D istributed E uropean I nfrastructure for S upercomputing A pplications - Consortium. IDRIS – CNRS, France ( coordinator ) FZJ – Juelich, Germany

Download Presentation

DEISA perspectives Workshop on Biomedical informatics, Brussels, March 18-19 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DEISA perspectivesWorkshop on Biomedical informatics, Brussels, March 18-19 2004 Victor Alessandrini www.deisa.org

  2. Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications - Consortium • IDRIS – CNRS, France (coordinator) • FZJ – Juelich, Germany • RZG – Garching, Max Planck Society, Germany • CINECA, Italy • EPCC (HPCx project), Edimburgh, UK • CSC, Helsinki, Finland • SARA, Amsterdam, The Netherlands • ECMWF (european organization), Reading, UK

  3. DEISA : mission statement • To contribute to a significant enhancement of capacities and capabilities of HPC in Europe, by the integration of leading national supercomputing infrastructures. • To deploy and operate a distributed multi-terascale European computing platform, based on a very strong coupling of existing national supercomputers. DEISA plans to operate as a virtual European supercomputing centre. • To contribute to the deployment of an extended, heterogeneous Grid computing environment for HPC in Europe, needed to interface the DEISA research infrastructures with the rest of the European IT infrastructures.

  4. DEISA management (operation as a virtual Europeansupercomputing centre)

  5. Artist’s view of the facility The DEISA super-cluster (the “core” project) Dedicated network interconnect (reserved bandwidth) National computing facility Site B Site A Site C Site D Extended Grid services

  6. DEISA and Grid technologies • Large scale integration of IT systems is, for DEISA, primarily an strategic issue • DEISA is technology neutral. Technology choices follow from their capability to adapt to a pre-established operational model, and to provide real services to end users. • Three criteria for technology choices: • The necessity of disposing as soon as possible of a stable and reliable European production platform (the “core” platform). Grid technologies work in the background through global file systems and multi-cluster batch managers. • The necessity interfacing this platform with other systems in Europe (the “outer” Grid environment). Deployment of traditional Grid environments, like the Globus Toolkit or Unicore. • The preparation of their future evolution by the integration of new Grid technologies as they reach maturity (a specific JRA activity).

  7. The first generation “core” infrastructure(operational early 2005) 125 cabinets like the ones shown above (IBM 690, 690+, 655+) 4000 processors (5 – 8 Gigaflops per processor) About 10 Terabytes memory A lot of useful teraflops. Inclusion of huge Linux and vector systems planned for 2005.

  8. Global File Systems Sophisticated software environment, necessary to provide single system image if a clustered computing platform. Global file system They provide global data management. Data in the GFS is “symmetric” with respect to all computing nodes. GFS encapsulate sophisticated distributed computing and Grid technologies. Applications do not need to be modified to benefit from GFS services. Grid technologies are working in the background, and they are not directly seen by end users.

  9. The DEISA integration concept (core infrastructure) Site A Site B Global distributed GPFS file system with continental scope. Global resource pool is dynamic: nodes can enter and leave the pool without disrupting the national services.. Network interconnect (reserved bandwidth) Site C Site D

  10. The DEISA operational model • Global management of an “ European resource pool”, that will provide: • An integrated supercomputing environment for trans-national collaborations, providing global data management through global file systems. • No need to grid enable huge applications (unless they are grid enabled by design). Applications can benefit from important computational resources being run “as such”. • Implementation of job migration across sites (transparent to end users) as a way of releasing significant resources in one particular site for demanding DEISA applications. We are load balancing computational throughput at a European scale. • Support of distributed applications (grid enabled by design). • With this operational model, the European super-cluster is not very different from a huge local supercomputing cluster (which will be partitioned anyhow because of fault tolerance).

  11. Scientific perspectives • We (the DEISA partners) have decades of experience in the production of leading edge computational science. • We dispose of competent staff for user support, system integration,… • Integration of human competences is as important as the integration of computing resources. • We have developed, over the years, very efficient interfaces with the different scientific communities (climat modeling, quantum chemistry, material sciences, …). Each one has its own specific requirements. • We are eager to develop special interfaces with the Bio-Medical community, in those areas in which we can provide added value to their research. • DEISA includes a Life Science Joint Research Activity.

  12. Prospective services (first guess) • Using the global distributed file systems of the “core” facility to deploy shared data repositories. • Deploying distributed heterogeneous file systems with external organizations to dispose of “enhanced privacy” access to dada. • Fine tunning new generation BMI applications to clusters of large, high physical memory, SMP clusters. Our “intelligent” operating systems can use large memory address space to create memory mapped file systems and dramatically reduce input/output overhead in data driven applications. • Running very demanding applications in what concerns processing power and memory size. • Running very demanding applications in what concerns execution times (hundreds of hours). This requires process migration and checkpoint-restart facilities for QoS (which are present in our platforms). • Interfacing with other organizations, which may act as “portals” to the DEISA environment. • Deploying high level Web-like services that will allow computational monitoring and steering of complex applications, hiding the DEISA environment from end users.

  13. Portals, Web-like services The DEISA super-cluster (the “core” project) ASP services. Users connect to an application, not to the computing environment. Provides computational monitoring and steering services. Technology already available for the DEISA users. Site B Site A Users are not IDRIS-DEISA aware Demanding applications are rerouted to IDRIS Site C IDRIS InfoBioGen

  14. ASP services: three tier architecture(for computationalmonitoring and steering). Firewall Internet Intranet Gateway: bridge between the Internet clients and the legacy environment. Handles all AA services. Clients connect to J2EE application running on the gateway. Back end server: runs high performance “legacy” application

  15. Extended, heterogeneous data management Global distributed file system with: - Single sign on - Intrinsic security model - Access control - Internal cryptographic mechanisms - Operating across firewalls - Web and NFS access to data. (candidate: AVAKI DataGrid) Site B Site A Other organizations disposing of confidential data sets. Site D Site C

  16. Conclusion • DEISA is focused on European computational science. • Strong integration of national supercomputing infrastructures should be pursued, as the only way forward (today) for matching the US and Japanese efforts in this area. • The DEISA consortium is committed to enhance the production capabilities of HPC in Europe, and to search for a very large user consensus and for a high impact in everyday creation of scientific results. This is its only measure of success. • We are eager to work with the BMI community to identify the areas in which we can provide leading edge services adapted to their needs.

More Related