Events: detail
SSE seminar: Submitting locally and running globally – The GLOW and OSG Experience
- Hosted by:
- UCL Computer Science Department
- Speaker:
-
Miron Livny, Dept. of Computer Sciences, University of Wisconsin
- Starts:
- November 22, 2007 at 03:00 pm
- Ends:
- November 22, 2007 at 04:00 pm
- Location:
- University College London, Malet Place Engineering Building, Room 106, 1st Floor, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT United Kingdom
- Maps:
Description
The Grid Laboratory of Wisconsin (GLOW) is a NSF funded, distributed facility at the University of Wisconsin – Madison campus. It is part of the newly formed Center for High Throughput Computing (CHTC) and consists of more than 1800 processing cores and 100 TB of storage located at six different sites. Since its inception in the winter of 04, it has been serving a broad range of disciplines ranging from Biotechnology and Computer Sciences to Medical-Physics and Economics. Each of the GLOW sites is configured as an autonomous locally managed Condor pool that can operate independently when disconnected from the other sites. Under normal conditions, the six pools act like a single Condor system that is coordinated via a highly-available campus-wide matchmaking service. On-campus and off-campus users interact with GLOW through job-managers located on their desktop computers.
The Open Science Grid (OSG) is a DOE and NSF funded US national distributed computing facility that supports scientific computing via an open collaboration of researchers, software developers and computing, storage and network providers. The OSG Consortium is building and operating the OSG facility, bringing resources and researchers from universities and national laboratories together and cooperating with other national and international infrastructures to give scientists access to shared resources world-wide. The particular characteristics of the OSG are to: Provide guaranteed and opportunistic access to shared resources; operate a heterogeneous environment both in services available at any site and for any Virtual Organization, and multiple implementations behind common interfaces; Support multiple software releases at any one time; Interface to campus and regional grids; Federate with other national and international grids.
In the talk, we will present the principals that guided us for more than two decades in developing our distributed computing technologies and high throughput computing software tools and will provide an overview of these two high throughput computing facilities. Capabilities to “elevate” local GLOW jobs to the national OSG infrastructure will be discussed. These capabilities follow our long standing “bottom-up” approach to the construction and operation of large scale distributed computing infrastructure that maximize reachable capacity while preserving local access, environment and autonomy.
- Registration required:
- Yes
- Free:
- Yes
Additional information
Visitors from outside UCL please email in advance
For more information
- Contact person:
- Wolfgang Emmerich
- Email:
- W.Emmerich [ at ] cs.ucl.ac.uk
- Website:
- SSE seminar: Submitting locally and running globally – The GLOW and OSG Experience
