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19–25 Oct 2024
Europe/Zurich timezone

The 200 Gbps Challenge: Imagining HL-LHC analysis facilities

21 Oct 2024, 09:30
30m
Large Hall

Large Hall

Talk Plenary Plenary session

Speakers

Alexander Held (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Brian Paul Bockelman (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Oksana Shadura (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US))

Description

The IRIS-HEP software institute, as a contributor to the broader HEP Python ecosystem, is developing scalable analysis infrastructure and software tools to address the upcoming HL-LHC computing challenges with new approaches and paradigms, driven by our vision of what HL-LHC analysis will require. The institute uses a “Grand Challenge” format, constructing a series of increasingly large, complex, and realistic exercises to show the vision of HL-LHC analysis. Recently, the focus has been demonstrating the IRIS-HEP analysis infrastructure at scale and evaluating technology readiness for production.

As a part of the Analysis Grand Challenge activities, the institute executed a “200 Gbps Challenge”, aiming to show sustained data rates into the event processing of multiple analysis pipelines. The challenge integrated teams internal and external to the institute, including operations and facilities, analysis software tools, innovative data delivery and management services, and scalable analysis infrastructure. The challenge showcases the prototypes — including software, services, and facilities — built to process around 200 TB of data in both the CMS NanoAOD and ATLAS PHYSLITE data formats with test pipelines.

The teams were able to sustain the 200 Gbps target across multiple pipelines. The pipelines focusing on event rate were able to process at over 30MHz. These target rates are demanding; the activity revealed considerations for future testing at this scale and changes necessary for physicists to work at this scale in the future. The 200 Gbps challenge has established a baseline on today’s facilities, setting the stage for the next exercise at twice the scale.

Primary authors

Alexander Held (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Andrew Wightman (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) Benjamin Tovar Lopez (University of Notre Dame) Brian Paul Bockelman (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Carl Lundstedt (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) David Lange (Princeton University (US)) Derek Weitzel (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) Fengping Hu (University of Chicago (US)) Garhan Attebury (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) Gordon Watts (University of Washington (US)) Ilija Vukotic (University of Chicago (US)) Jim Pivarski (Princeton University) John Thiltges (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) Kenneth Bloom (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) Kyle Stuart Cranmer (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Kyungeon Choi (University of Texas at Austin (US)) Lincoln Bryant (University of Chicago (US)) Lindsey Gray (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Matthew Feickert (University of Wisconsin Madison (US)) Nick Smith (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Oksana Shadura (University of Nebraska Lincoln (US)) Peter Elmer (Princeton University (US)) Peter Onyisi (University of Texas at Austin (US)) Robert William Gardner Jr (University of Chicago (US)) Sam Albin (UNL)

Presentation materials