4th EGEE User Forum/OGF 25 and OGF Europe's 2nd International Event
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
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Basic Introduction to EGEE and Grid Computing - OBS! At the University! University of Catania (Department of Physics and Astronomy)
University of Catania
Department of Physics and Astronomy
University of CataniaThe purpose of this session is to provide a high level introduction to Grid Technology and how this is applied to the EGEE grid. The session will also include a short demo, submitting jobs to EGEE using the P-Grade portal.
The course will be assume that the participants have no prior knowledge of Grid Compuitng, giving them a basic idea of the concepts of Grids, and their importance in providing large processing facilities for furthering e-Science projects.
This session is an accompaniment to the 4th EGEE User Forum which takes place in Catania 2-6 march 2009.
For more informatin and registration, please go to: http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceDisplay.py?confId=48867
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Distributed data access and management with OGSA-DAI Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDistributed data access and management with OGSA-DAI (1/2) (90 mins)
Mike JacksonThis session provides a comprehensive overview of a powerful solution for distributed data access, management and integration - OGSA-DAI - and how it can be used to solve data-related problems in both enterprise and research contexts. An overview of OGSA-DAI is given as well as the
latest work on increasing OGSA-DAI's power via distributed query processing and SQL view definition. It describes the relationship of OGSA-DAI to OGF's work on data access and integration standards - WS-DAI - and how such specifications provide a way of exposing OGSA-DAI's
functionality in a more usable format and lends itself to
inter-operability and integration with other service-oriented technologies.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of a powerful solution for distributed data access, management and integration - OGSA-DAI - and how it can be used to solve data-related problems in both enterprise and research contexts. An overview of OGSA-DAI is given as well as the
latest work on increasing OGSA-DAI's power via distributed query processing and SQL view definition. It describes the relationship of OGSA-DAI to OGF's work on data access and integration standards - WS-DAI - and how such specifications provide a way of exposing OGSA-DAI's
functionality in a more usable format and lends itself to
inter-operability and integration with other service-oriented technologies.Target audience: software developers, technical leaders
OGSA-DAI is OMII-UK's Grid data access and integration middleware product. Participants will learn about the problem space where OGSA-DAI sits as well as:
- How it can be used to achieve common data access and integration scenarios.
- How it offers a powerful solution for data access and integration scenarios by combining services with an underlying workflow engine.
- How OGSA-DAI can be used to develop well-defined services for data manipulation, with reference to WS-DAI.
By the end of the session, participants will have a good understanding of key features of OGSA-DAI, the problems it is designed to solve, and see how to reap the benefits of deploying in their projects. Examples of both research and business applications will be used.
Agenda:
OGSA-DAI- OGSA-DAI project
- Distributed data management scenarios
- Possible solutions
- OGSA-DAI and workflows
- Realising the scenarios
- OGSA-DAI and security
- Extending OGSA-DAI's power via SQL views and DQP
- Concealing workflows behind facades
- Standards, WS-DAI and OGSA-DAI
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Elastic Management of a Grid Computing Service with OpenNebula and Amazon EC2 Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaElastic Management of a Grid Computing Service with OpenNebula and Amazon EC2 (90 mins)
The goal of this tutorial is to provide a global overview of the process of installing, configuring and deploying a typical computing element of a Grid site using a private cloud. The tutorial will focus on three key aspects when managing a virtual infrastructure, namely: image management, networking and hypervisors. Additionally the tutorial will address the scale-out of the Grid site by allocating extra capacity on the Amazon EC2. The tutorial is based in open source cloud components and includes hands-on exercises.
CONTENTS:-
Overview of Grid & Cloud Technologies. This section briefly reviews the main characteristics and goals of the Cloud & Grid technologies and presents the challenges of deploying a Grid site (or a part of it) in a Cloud. Finally the main tools used in this tutorial are presented.
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Configuring your site. This section will outline the philosophy of OpenNebula and details different configuration approaches for a private cloud. Finally the main OpenNebula subsystems are described and hints on extending and adapting them are provided.
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Using OpenNebula. Here we describe the CLI tools and API to interact with OpenNebula, in particular we will review the interface to manage physical hosts, virtual networks and virtual machines.
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Virtualizating a Grid Computing Element. In this part we will virtualized the components of a typical Grid computing service. In particular, specific aspects on image contextualization and networking will be discussed.
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Scale-out of your Computing Element with Amazon EC2. The tutorial ends with the scale out of the previous site to Amazon EC2. Specific networking and configuration issues are described.
SKILLS GAINED
- Describe the features and benefits of using virtualization and clouds.
- Describe different architectures for a private cloud that can be deployed with OpenNebula.
- Install and basic configure OpenNebula.
- Manage cluster nodes, virtual networks and virtual machines.
- Understand the challenges of deploying an application in the cloud.
- Deploy a Grid Computing Element in the Cloud.PREREQUISITES
User level knowledge and skills in Unix or Linux systems . The course includes hands-on exercises to be performed using attendee's laptops.
Agenda:
AGENDA:
1. Overview of Grid & Cloud Technologies.
2. Configuring your site.
4. Using OpenNebula.
5. Virtualizating a Grid Computing Element.
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Introducing Desktop Grids and integration with Service Grids such as EGEE Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaIntroducing Desktop Grids and integration with Service Grids such as EGEE (90 mins)
Ad Emmen, Peter KacsukGrids? Clouds? Computer infrastructure on-demand! Computers grow older while you watch them Each second you do not use your computer is a second lost forever. You cannot "save" hard disk space for later if you do not use it. A computer at home or in the office, costs money and uses energy.
On the other hand - do not have enough computer power or disk space - when you need it, can be just as bad. Suppose you are a small company and you just did introduce a
new computer based service that does extremely well beyond all expectations and you get thousands of new customers all accessing your system that is too small to handle
it. By the time you ordered and installed new computers, your customers are already gone, disappointed with your service.But advanced computing techniques, with exotic names as Grid computing and Cloud computing now enable a computer infrastructure on-demand. This can be applied in science and industry.
This tutorial focuses on Desktop Grid computing put in context of computer infrastructure on-demand. The concepts and most important software projects will be described, including BOINC, XtremWeb and EDGeS. Comparisons with commercial Desktop Grid software, such as GridMP, LSF Desktop, will be made.
It will be shown how Desktop Grids works and how a BOINC Grid and an XtremWeb Grid can be set up.
Desktop Grids will be compared to Service Grids, such as EGEE, and an introduction will be given into the EDGeS Grid infrastructure that connects both types of Grids with Bridges. The tutorial will explain what to do if you want to extend an EGEE VO with volunteer or local Desktop Grids or you want to connect your Desktop Grid to EGEE in order to get resources from EGEE.
Target Audience:
Persons considering setting up a Desktop Grid, or using it for applications. Grid experts that are new to Desktop Grids. Representatives of EGEE VO communities that would like to extend their EGEE resources with connected Desktop Grids. Representatives of Desktop Grids who would like to connect their Desktop Grid to EGEE via the EDGeS infrastructure.
Lecturers
Ad Emmen CV: Ad Emmen studied physics at the university of Nijmegen. He has been active in Hihg-performance computing, and later Grid computing for more than 25 years. Currently he is director of AlmereGrid, the first cityGrid in the world, and has extensive knowledge of operating Desktop Grids, using BOINC, XtremWeb and LSF Desktop technology. He is involved in the EDGeS project (http://EDGeS-grid.eu). Ad Emmen is Member of the Board of Gridforum Netherlands. He is editor of EnterTheGrid Primeur magazine, and Virtual Medical Worlds Magazine. Apart from HPC and Grids, he is also interested in XML technology and knowledge management. He developed the knowledge base on European e-Infrastructures for the e-IRGSP(2) project. http://AlmereGrid.nl http://EDGeS-grid.eu http://knowledgebase.e-irg.eu Peter Kacsuk CV: Peter KACSUK is the Head of the Laboratory of Parallel and Distributed Systems in MTA SZTAKI Computer and Automation Research Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He received his MSc and university doctorate degrees from the Technical University of Budapest in 1976 and 1984, respectively. He received the kandidat degree (equivalent to PhD) from the Hungarian Academy in 1989. He habilitated at the University of Vienna in 1997. He recieved his professor title from the Hungarian President in 1999 and the Doctor of Academy degree (DSc) from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2001. He has been a part-time full professor at the Cavendish School of Computer Science of the University of Westminster and the Eötvös Lóránd University of Science Budapest since 2001. He has published two books, two lecture notes and more than 200 scientific papers on parallel computer architectures, parallel software engineering and Grid computing. He is co-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Grid Computing published by Springer. He is the coordinator of the EDGeS project. http://www.lpds.sztaki.hu/index.php?menu=about&submenu=staff&&load=staff.php http://www.cpc.wmin.ac.uk/cpcsite/index.php/Staff -
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Metascheduling architectures for NGIs Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMetascheduling architectures for NGIs (90 mins)
I. M. Llorente (UCM) and E. Huedo (UCM)This session will provide a forum for representatives of grid infrastructures using GridWay to present their experiences, architectures and results.
Representatives of other infrastructures would learn the benefits of GridWay in building NGIs.
The focus would be on the use of GridWay in enterprise, regional, national or international infrastructures to highlight its benefits for current or future NGIs, especially in terms of flexibility and interoperation capabilities.
We are inviting representatives of some grid infrastructures using GridWay to present their experiences, results and GridWay-based architectures.
We will invite representatives of APAC Grid, D-Grid, AstroGrid-G, UK e-Science, TeraGrid, Spanish NGI, PRAGMA, CRO-Grid, UABGrid, TIGRE, SURAgrid, ThaiGrid or GARUDA.
We have confirmed the participation of representatives from the Spanish NGI, UABGrid (US), SURAgrid (US) and KIAE Grid (Russia).
Agenda:
1. State and future plans of the GridWay Metascheduler (10 minutes)
2. Presentation of selected infrastructures (60 minutes)
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OGF Standards Adoption Track: UNICORE 6 Grid Middleware Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF Standards Adoption Track: UNICORE 6 Grid Middleware (90 mins)
Morris Riedel, Achim StreitThis session will highlight the numerous open standards implemented within the open source UNICORE 6 Grid middleware. Although UNICORE 6 is majorly driven by High Performance Computing (HPC), it can also be used in typical Grid setups that take advantage of the use of High Throughput Computing (HTC). The session also provides pieces of information of how open source developers can contribute with their own solutions to the UNICORE technology.
Agenda:
(1)
Introduction to UNICORE 6(2)
Open Standards Adoption in UNICORE 6(3)
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OGF-Europe Tutorial: Managing Computational Activities on the Grid - from Specifications to Implementation Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-Europe Tutorial: Managing Computational Activities on the Grid - from Specifications to Implementation (1/2) (90 mins)
Sergio Andreozzi, Balazs Konya, Morris RiedelThis OGF-Europe tutorial will explore how current and upcoming OGF standards have made the interoperable submission, monitoring and controlling of computational activities in Grid systems a feature of Grid middleware.
Tutorial participants will gain new knowledge on a series of key specifications: BES (Basic Execution Service), JSDL (Job Submission Description Language), HPC Extensions (High-Performance Computing), GLUE (an information model for Grid resources).
Participants will learn about the on-going implementation work by leading European middleware providers.
Specific takeaways include insight into BES, JSDL, HPC extensions and GLUE standards, application scenarios, design choices and technical challenges for the transition from specifications to implementation.
Target audience: Grid developers and Grid advanced end-users
Agenda:
Agenda:
- General introduction
- Introducution to Job submission
-- Scenarios
-- Job management before OGF standards
- OGF Standards for Job Management
-- JSDL - B. Konya
-- HPC Extensions to JSDL - B. Konya
-- OGSA-BES - A. Konstantinov
-- GLUE
- Implementation of standards and extension to them
- Security aspects
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Transition towards EGI Workshop Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaTransition towards EGI workshop (1/2) (90 mins)
Dr. Ludek MatyskaThis workshop will start with the overview of the state of EGI, its state and expected form and will focus on the processes associated with the transition from EGEE and other existing Grid infrastructures into the EGI model in Europe; it will also touch the international (outside Europe) dimension and interaction. The workshop will be the best opportunity to provide feedback on these plans as expressed in the EGI transition Deliverable that will be available for public comments approximately one week before the workshop. The workshop will be composed from presentations of the EGI_DS team and we also plan to invite users and representatives of especially non European Grid infrastructures to explicitly share their views and expectations, as well as eventual worries.
Convener: Klaus Ullmann (DFN)-
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Welcome 15mSpeaker: Juergen Knobloch (CERN)
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Discussion 15m
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Usage Control for Next Generation Grids Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaUsage Control for Next Generation Grids (1/2) (90 mins)
Alvaro Arenas (STFC RAL, UK); Lorenzo Blasi (HP, Italy); Giovanni Cortese (Interplay, Italy); Bruno Crispo (VUA, Netherlands, and Univ. Trento, Italy); Fabio Martinelli (CNR, Italy); Philippe MassonetUsage control is an authorisation framework that extends traditional access control by controlling data access as well as usage. This tutorial presents how to model and implement usage control for Grids. The tutorial comprises five parts: an introduction to the usage control model; an OGSA-based architecture for usage control; usage control policies in XACML; an alternative policy language for usage control in Grids; and two case studies showing the application of usage control in Grid systems
The “Usage Control for Next Generation Grids” tutorial consists of the following six talks:Usage Control for Grids.
The usage control model (UCON) is a new access control paradigm proposed by Park and Sandhu that encompasses and extends different existing models. Its main novelty, in addition to the unification view, is based on continuity of usage monitoring and mutability of attributes. This talk introduces the usage control model and highlights the challenges in controlling resource usage in Grid systems.An Architecture for Usage Control in Grids.
This talk describes an OGSA-based architecture for implementing usage control for Grids. The architecture has been developed in the EU GridTrust project, extending the current Grid Security Infrastructure (GSI) to deal with usage control.Usage Control Policies in XACML.
XACML is the standard language for access control in distributed systems. This talk presents how XACML has been extended and used for the specific purpose of expressing and supporting usage control in Grid applications. Particular emphasis will be given to performance and scalability issues. Furthermore, the talk will address the issue of the interaction of scheduling with access control.Usage Control in Action: Controlling Service Usage in a Grid-Based Content Management System.
This talk presents a case study of the application of usage control based on XACML. The case study is a grid-based content management system that supports a distributed organization in the execution of collaborative projects, aiming at the production of a complex ‘digital’ product. The production process is structured along a workflow such as a software production process or a web / content publishing process.PolPA: A Usage Control Policy Language for Grids.
Policies languages as XACML cannot express the full potentiality of usage control models such as UCON. This talk shows an alternative policy language, PolPA, that has been designed specifically for expressing usage control policies and has been tailored for dealing with Grids. Since it is based on Process Algebras, PolPA is very expressive and allows to encode all the core models that have been defined by Park and Sandhu. This talk also describes a reference architecture to enforce PolPA in Grid systems.Usage Control in Action: Controlling Resource Usage in a Grid-Based Supply Chain.
This talk presents a case study of the application of usage control based on PolPA. The case study is a transportation supply chain which exploits Grid services for optimizing both the delivery and cost of each customer order. Each transporter uses a Grid-based computing service to re-optimize the routes of its vehicles’ fleet after the addition of each new transportation task. Transporters submit their routing jobs to a Grid portal supported by their association. Local usage control policies allow computational service providers to protect their resources and other transporters’ data.References:
• “A Model for Usage Control in GRID Systems”, F. Martinelli and P. Mori. In Proceeding of Grid-STP 2007, International Workshop on Security, Trust and Privacy in Grid Systems at SecureComm 2007. IEEE Computer Society, (2007), IEEE Catalog Number: 07EX168, ISBN: 1-4244-0975-6.• "XACML Policy Integration Algorithms.", P. Mazzoleni, B. Crispo, S. Sivasubramanian, E. Bertino: , ACM Transactions on Information and System Security (TISSEC), vol.11 n.1, February, 2008.
• “Efficient Integration of Fine-Grained Access Control and Resource Brokering in Grid”. P. Mazzoleni, B. Crispo, S. Sivasubramanian, E. Bertino, The Journal of Supercomputing, Springer Netherlands, October 2008.
• “A Secure Environment for Grid-Based Supply Chains”, L.Blasi, A.Arenas, B.Aziz, P.Mori, U.Rovati, B.Crispo, F.Martinelli, P.Massonet. Published in: Collaboration and the Knowledge Economy: Issues, Applications, Case Studies, P. and M. Cunningham (Eds), IOS Press, 2008 Amsterdam, ISBN 978-1-58603-924-0.
Agenda:
1. Usage Control for Grids (25 minutes).
2. An Architecture for Usage Control in Grids (20 minutes).
3. Usage Control Policies in XACML (45 minutes).
4. Usage Control in Action: Controlling Service Usage in a Grid-Based Content Management System (20 minutes).
5. PolPA: A Usage Control Policy Language for Grids (45 minutes).
6. Usage Control in Action: Controlling Resource Usage in a Grid-Based Supply Chain (25 minutes). -
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Using the ETICS Test System to analyse standard compliance and interoperability of grid software Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe ETICS Tutorial provides an introduction to the ETICS system concepts and features. It describes the ETICS Portal and the ETICS Client and guides the users through basic usage scenarios. It will be shown how ETICS can be used to perform standard compliance testing and interoperabilty testing
The ETICS System is an advanced build and test system designed to facilitate the management of complex distributed software in general and grid software in particular. In this tutorial, users will be given hands-on training on using the ETICS System to perform standard compliance and interoperability tests of software. The tutorial is divided in two parts:- in the first part attendees will be given an introduction to ETICS and its typical usage scenarios using the web appliations and the command-line client.
- in the second part it will be shown how to use ETICS to perform standard compliance testing and how to set up and manage interoperability tests among different middleware implementations including ARC, UNICORE and CREAM
Agenda: - ETICS Overview
- The ETICS Portal and the Web Applications
- Installing the ETICS Client
- Basic usage scenarios
- The ETICS Plugins and their application to compliance analysis
- Setting up and managing distributed tests. The example will show how to tests interoperabilty among ARC, UNICORE and gLite CREAM
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Vulnerability Assessment and Secure Coding Practices for Middleware Tutorial Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaVulnerability Assessment and Secure Coding Practices for Middleware Tutorial (1/2) (90 mins)
James A. Kupsch and Prof. Barton P. MillerSecurity is crucial in the software that we develop and use. This tutorial is relevant to anyone wanting to learn about assessing software for security flaws and for developers wishing to minimize security flaws in software they develop.
We share our experience in vulnerability assessment of real-world grid middleware. You will learn skills critical for developers and analysts concerned about software security, and the importance of independent vulnerability assessment.
The tutorial covers a process to actively discover vulnerabilities. We show how to gather information about a system which is used to direct the search for vulnerabilities, and how to integrate vulnerability assessment and discovery into the development cycle.
Next, we examine coding practices to prevent vulnerabilities by describing more than 20 types of vulnerabilities with examples of how they commonly arise, and techniques to prevent them. Most examples are in C, C++, Perl, and the standard C and POSIX APIs.
This tutorial teaches critical assessment and coding skills. In addition, it discusses policy issues relating to independent auditing, vulnerability reporting, and integrating security fixes into the software release cycle.
The security of software is becoming increasingly important to anyone who uses or develops it. This tutorial teaches developers and assessors how to proactively reduce the number of vulnerabilities in their software. Just as independent QA testing is essential for assessing software reliability, testing for security is essential for assuring software security. Even projects that architect their software with security in mind still need independent vulnerability assessment to detect design flaws or coding problems that can arise in any project. Testing for security is an essential part of the development process and a unique skill that requires training.This tutorial is an outgrowth of our experience in performing vulnerability assessment of a variety of grid middleware, which includes Condor from the University of Wisconsin, the Storage Resource Broker from the San Diego Supercomputer Center, MyProxy from the National Center for Supercomputer Applications, and EGEE's glexec. The tutorial teaches the processes and skills that we developed and used in these activities.
This tutorial is relevant to anyone who wants to learn about analyzing software for security flaws and for developers wishing to minimize security flaws in software that they develop. It covers the two sides of security: the offensive--how to find problems through the use of proactive vulnerability assessment; and the defensive--how to prevent problems by showing many types of vulnerabilities that occur in code and what techniques can be used to prevent them.
The target audience for this tutorial is anyone involved with the development of software, wishing to assess the security of software, or managing the software development process. To gain maximum benefit from this tutorial, attendees should be familiar with the process of developing software and the C programming language, along with a basic knowledge of the standard C library and the POSIX API.
This tutorial does not assume any prior knowledge of security assessment or vulnerabilities. Some of the examples include less common APIs, or are in a programming language other than the C programming language. In these instances, enough explanation is given so the attendee unfamiliar with the topic should be able to understand the concepts.
The first part of this tutorial explains how to perform a vulnerability assessment. Our process is based on a deep assessment of the software, done by one who is working in cooperation with the development team and has access to source code, internal documents and developers. We emphasize understanding of the process of vulnerability assessment and developing the skills needed to conduct such an assessment.
The first step of a vulnerability assessment is to gain an in-depth understanding of the system. Without an understanding of how it works, it is impossible to know what are the critical assets and what are the threats to these assets. To do this, the tutorial shows a process to gather and document this information by performing an architectural, resource and privilege analysis. These steps are completed by meeting with the developers, reviewing design documents and end-user documentation, using the system, and looking at the code.
The architectural analysis consists of discovering and documenting the high level structures of the system: functionality, hosts, configuration parameters, processes, user interaction, interactions between processes, interactions with external systems, other communication channels, resources controlled by processes, and trust between components.
The resource and privilege analysis is the process of discovering and documenting the objects that the system can manipulate, such as in-memory data structures, database records, files, CPU cycles, and physical devices controlled by the computer. It also documents what actions can be performed on the resources in the system. The privilege analysis documents the privilege model defined by the system itself, and the configuration of privileges in the underlying operating system and external applications, such as databases.
The tutorial then shows how to create data flow diagrams from the results of the prior analyses. These diagrams contain much of the information collected earlier in a succinct fashion that allows the analyst to easily comprehend the system.
The tutorial then covers the process of performing a component analysis, which is looking for vulnerabilities in components of the system. Since it is not realistic to completely verify the security of the system, the tutorial shows how to use the previous steps of the analysis to focus the search to find both those that are likely to be easily found by outside attackers, and also those vulnerabilities that can lead to higher value targets such as the compromise of the host operating system or a subversion of the privilege system. Information in the second part of the tutorial explains how to look for specific types of vulnerabilities.
The tutorial also describes how to integrate the results of the vulnerability assessment process into the software development process, including writing vulnerability reports, the vulnerability disclosure process, fixing vulnerabilities, and releasing security updates.
The second part of this tutorial focuses on vulnerabilities. It features several interactive secure coding quizzes where the audience is challenged to find as many vulnerabilities as they can in short code fragments. What the audience finds (and does not find) are then discussed.
This part also contains a discussion of the most common vulnerabilities and is valuable to both developers and security assessors. Descriptions of each vulnerability are presented with examples. It is shown how the vulnerability typically occurs within code, pointing out APIs or techniques that commonly result in the vulnerability, and also how the vulnerability can be mitigated or eliminated through the use of other techniques or APIs. The causes and types of vulnerabilities covered include:
- Lack of data validation
- Error Handling
- Buffer overflows
- Numeric parsing
- Integer vulnerabilities
- Race conditions
- Injection attacks
- Format string attack
- Command injection
- SQL injection
- Cross-site scripting (XSS)
- Directory traversals
- Memory management attacks
- Race conditions
- Denial of service
- Insecure permissions
- Not dropping privileges
- Information leaks
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Coffee 30m
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Distributed data access and management with OGSA-DAI Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDistributed data access and management with OGSA-DAI (1/2) (90 mins)
Mike JacksonThis session provides a comprehensive overview of a powerful solution for distributed data access, management and integration - OGSA-DAI - and how it can be used to solve data-related problems in both enterprise and research contexts. An overview of OGSA-DAI is given as well as the
latest work on increasing OGSA-DAI's power via distributed query processing and SQL view definition. It describes the relationship of OGSA-DAI to OGF's work on data access and integration standards - WS-DAI - and how such specifications provide a way of exposing OGSA-DAI's
functionality in a more usable format and lends itself to
inter-operability and integration with other service-oriented technologies.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of a powerful solution for distributed data access, management and integration - OGSA-DAI - and how it can be used to solve data-related problems in both enterprise and research contexts. An overview of OGSA-DAI is given as well as the
latest work on increasing OGSA-DAI's power via distributed query processing and SQL view definition. It describes the relationship of OGSA-DAI to OGF's work on data access and integration standards - WS-DAI - and how such specifications provide a way of exposing OGSA-DAI's
functionality in a more usable format and lends itself to
inter-operability and integration with other service-oriented technologies.Target audience: software developers, technical leaders
OGSA-DAI is OMII-UK's Grid data access and integration middleware product. Participants will learn about the problem space where OGSA-DAI sits as well as:
- How it can be used to achieve common data access and integration scenarios.
- How it offers a powerful solution for data access and integration scenarios by combining services with an underlying workflow engine.
- How OGSA-DAI can be used to develop well-defined services for data manipulation, with reference to WS-DAI.
By the end of the session, participants will have a good understanding of key features of OGSA-DAI, the problems it is designed to solve, and see how to reap the benefits of deploying in their projects. Examples of both research and business applications will be used.
Agenda:
OGSA-DAI- OGSA-DAI project
- Distributed data management scenarios
- Possible solutions
- OGSA-DAI and workflows
- Realising the scenarios
- OGSA-DAI and security
- Extending OGSA-DAI's power via SQL views and DQP
- Concealing workflows behind facades
- Standards, WS-DAI and OGSA-DAI
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Genesis II (90 mins Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGenesis II (90 mins)
Genesis II is the first integrated implementation of the standards and profiles coming out of the OGF Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA) Working Group [2-4]. Genesis II is a complete set of Grid services for users and applications which not only follows our maxim – “by default the user should not have to think” – but is also a from-scratch implementation of the standards and profiles – not a wrapping of existing artifacts. Genesis II is open source under the Apache license.
Genesis II is the first integrated implementation of the standards and profiles coming out of the OGF Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA) Working Group [2-4]. Genesis II is a complete set of Grid services for users and applications which not only follows our maxim – “by default the user should not have to think” – but is also a from-scratch implementation of the standards and profiles – not a wrapping of existing artifacts. Genesis II is open source under the Apache license.
Genesis II was created to address a number of needs and answer various questions about emerging Grid technology. These included
• the need for a production Grid system with which to provide compute and data Grid capabilities to various partner groups and research projects,
• the desire to have a fully functional Grid framework on which further Grid research could be performed,
• and the desire to “test drive” the various specifications making their way through various standardization organizations to both vet and better understand those specifications, both in isolation, and together as a whole.
Genesis II is fully operational in a production environment at the University of Virginia. It supports both data and compute Grid functionality. Users can interact with Genesis II via both a familiar command-line interface (based largely on common *NIX commands such as ls, cat, cp, etc.), through a Grid aware FTP daemon, via an IFS file system in Windows, and in Linux via a FUSE [5] file system driver that maps the Genesis namespace into the local file system namespace. Genesis II has OGSA-BES [1, 4] implementations for both Windows and Linux, as well as a simple job manager that implements a simple queue. To run jobs users can submit JSDL documents to a queue (described shortly) or run them directly on a BES resource.Agenda:
The proposed tutorial will focus on installing and using Genesis II. The tutorial will begin with an overview of Genesis II, how the standards fit into Genesis II, and the driving architectural theme – a single shared directory system that maps human paths to EPR’s. We will then install Genesis II on participant laptops (if they have them and are willing), demonstrate how to mount and use the FUSE and Windows IFS interfaces to Genesis II, how to run jobs, run sets of jobs, and share data with other users. -
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OGF-Europe Tutorial: How new communities can get access to a Grid infrastructure Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-Europe Tutorial: How new communities can get access to a Grid infrastructure (90 mins)
David Fergusson, Morris Riedel, Balazs KonyaThis OGF-Europe tutorial will explain how new communities or organizations can get access to existing Grid infrastructures.
The following Grid infrastructures will be considered: EGEE, NorduGrid, DEISA
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OGF-Europe Tutorial: Managing Computational Activities on the Grid - from Specifications to Implementation Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-Europe Tutorial: Managing Computational Activities on the Grid - from Specifications to Implementation (1/2) (90 mins)
Sergio Andreozzi, Balazs Konya, Morris RiedelThis OGF-Europe tutorial will explore how current and upcoming OGF standards have made the interoperable submission, monitoring and controlling of computational activities in Grid systems a feature of Grid middleware.
Tutorial participants will gain new knowledge on a series of key specifications: BES (Basic Execution Service), JSDL (Job Submission Description Language), HPC Extensions (High-Performance Computing), GLUE (an information model for Grid resources).
Participants will learn about the on-going implementation work by leading European middleware providers.
Specific takeaways include insight into BES, JSDL, HPC extensions and GLUE standards, application scenarios, design choices and technical challenges for the transition from specifications to implementation.
Target audience: Grid developers and Grid advanced end-users
Agenda:
Agenda:
- General introduction
- Introducution to Job submission
-- Scenarios
-- Job management before OGF standards
- OGF Standards for Job Management
-- JSDL - B. Konya
-- HPC Extensions to JSDL - B. Konya
-- OGSA-BES - A. Konstantinov
-- GLUE
- Implementation of standards and extension to them
- Security aspects
- Exercises -
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Porting Applications with Globus GridWay Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaPorting Applications with Globus GridWay (90 mins)
I. M. Llorente (UCM) and E. Huedo (UCM)The aim of the tutorial is to provide a global overview of the process of installing, configuring and using GridWay. The tutorial also focuses on the development of codes using the C and JAVA bindings of the DRMAA OGF standard. The development of codes using DRMAA assures compatibility of applications with other management systems that implements the standard.
During the tutorial, participants would receive a practical overview of the agenda topics, having the opportunity to exercise GridWay functionality with examples on a real grid infrastructure
Agenda:
1. Introduction to the GridWay Metascheduler (10 min)
2. Installation and Basic Configuration (20 min)
3. Submission, Monitoring and Control of Jobs (30 min)
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Porting applications to the Grid using the EDGeS Application Development Methodology Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaPorting applications to the Grid using the EDGeS Application Development Methodology (90 mins)
Tamas Kiss, Ad EmmenAbstract:
A Grid can be a powerful number crunching machine bringing the power of thousands of processors to an application developer's finger tips. Although current Grid infrastructures offer significant amount of resources to run computation and data intensive applications, some scenarios still overgrow the capabilities of existing
Grids. Unfortunately, the two main types of Grids infrastructures, Service and Desktop Grid systems, were not interoperable until recently. The European EDGeS
project is currently developing a bi-directional bridge connecting this diverse collection of resources.Programming an application for a Grid is not easy. Current Grid application development efforts very often use ad-hoc approaches only when porting the applications. Developers do not follow any suggested methodology and this may result
is poorly documented systems that do not fulfill user expectations. In order to avoid this trap, support application developers and provide guidelines when porting
an application to the EDGeS Grid platform, the EDGeS Application Development Methodology (EADM) has been specified.This tutorial introduces the EDGeS Grid platform (EGEE extended with BOINC and XtremWeb Desktop Grids) and the EDGeS Application
Development Methodology. So far 12 applications from fields of bio-science, chemistry, physics, engineering, e-market, etc. have been ported to EDGeS. Case studies of tools that make the application development easier and examples for applications that have been ported to EDGeS using the EADM
are presented.
Target Audience:
Application developers that want to port an application to Desktop Grids. Representatives of EGEE user communities who want to port existing EGEE applications to the EDGeS infrastructure.Lecturer:
Tamas KissCV:
Tamas Kiss is a Senior Lecturer in Database Systems at the Department of Information Systems and Computing, and a researcher at the Centre for Parallel Computing at the
School of Informatics, University of Westminster, London. His research interests include parallel and Grid computing, and he has extended experience in the area of legacy code deployment, interoperation of Grid systems, and application porting to
service and desktop Grid systems. He led the design and development activities resulting in the Grid Execution Management for Legacy Code Architecture (GEMLCA)
solution, now a Globus incubator project, within the UK EPSRC founded OGSA Testbed project. He contributed to the CoreGrid Network of Excellence project as the leader
of the Legacy Code Wrapping and Deployment Methodologies Research Group within the Institute on Grid Systems, Tools and Environments. He currently leads the Grid Application Support Service activity within the European EDGeS project.
Tamas has extended experience in teaching in higher education and giving Grid tutorials, lectures and hands-on sessions (e.g. GEMLCA/P-GRADE portal courses organised by the UK National e-Science Center (NESC) and the EGEE project). He co-authored one book and more than 50 scientific papers in journals and conference proceedings, and as book chapters. -
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Transition towards EGI Workshop Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaTransition towards EGI workshop (1/2) (90 mins)
Dr. Ludek MatyskaThis workshop will start with the overview of the state of EGI, its state and expected form and will focus on the processes associated with the transition from EGEE and other existing Grid infrastructures into the EGI model in Europe; it will also touch the international (outside Europe) dimension and interaction. The workshop will be the best opportunity to provide feedback on these plans as expressed in the EGI transition Deliverable that will be available for public comments approximately one week before the workshop. The workshop will be composed from presentations of the EGI_DS team and we also plan to invite users and representatives of especially non European Grid infrastructures to explicitly share their views and expectations, as well as eventual worries.
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Middleware 20mSpeakers: Mr Laurence Field (CERN), Michael Gronager (NDGF), Dr Mirco Mazzucato (INFN), Steven Newhouse (CERN)
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Usage Control for Next Generation Grids Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaUsage Control for Next Generation Grids (1/2) (90 mins)
Alvaro Arenas (STFC RAL, UK); Lorenzo Blasi (HP, Italy); Giovanni Cortese (Interplay, Italy); Bruno Crispo (VUA, Netherlands, and Univ. Trento, Italy); Fabio Martinelli (CNR, Italy); Philippe MassonetUsage control is an authorisation framework that extends traditional access control by controlling data access as well as usage. This tutorial presents how to model and implement usage control for Grids. The tutorial comprises five parts: an introduction to the usage control model; an OGSA-based architecture for usage control; usage control policies in XACML; an alternative policy language for usage control in Grids; and two case studies showing the application of usage control in Grid systems
The “Usage Control for Next Generation Grids” tutorial consists of the following six talks:Usage Control for Grids.
The usage control model (UCON) is a new access control paradigm proposed by Park and Sandhu that encompasses and extends different existing models. Its main novelty, in addition to the unification view, is based on continuity of usage monitoring and mutability of attributes. This talk introduces the usage control model and highlights the challenges in controlling resource usage in Grid systems.An Architecture for Usage Control in Grids.
This talk describes an OGSA-based architecture for implementing usage control for Grids. The architecture has been developed in the EU GridTrust project, extending the current Grid Security Infrastructure (GSI) to deal with usage control.Usage Control Policies in XACML.
XACML is the standard language for access control in distributed systems. This talk presents how XACML has been extended and used for the specific purpose of expressing and supporting usage control in Grid applications. Particular emphasis will be given to performance and scalability issues. Furthermore, the talk will address the issue of the interaction of scheduling with access control.Usage Control in Action: Controlling Service Usage in a Grid-Based Content Management System.
This talk presents a case study of the application of usage control based on XACML. The case study is a grid-based content management system that supports a distributed organization in the execution of collaborative projects, aiming at the production of a complex ‘digital’ product. The production process is structured along a workflow such as a software production process or a web / content publishing process.PolPA: A Usage Control Policy Language for Grids.
Policies languages as XACML cannot express the full potentiality of usage control models such as UCON. This talk shows an alternative policy language, PolPA, that has been designed specifically for expressing usage control policies and has been tailored for dealing with Grids. Since it is based on Process Algebras, PolPA is very expressive and allows to encode all the core models that have been defined by Park and Sandhu. This talk also describes a reference architecture to enforce PolPA in Grid systems.Usage Control in Action: Controlling Resource Usage in a Grid-Based Supply Chain.
This talk presents a case study of the application of usage control based on PolPA. The case study is a transportation supply chain which exploits Grid services for optimizing both the delivery and cost of each customer order. Each transporter uses a Grid-based computing service to re-optimize the routes of its vehicles’ fleet after the addition of each new transportation task. Transporters submit their routing jobs to a Grid portal supported by their association. Local usage control policies allow computational service providers to protect their resources and other transporters’ data.References:
• “A Model for Usage Control in GRID Systems”, F. Martinelli and P. Mori. In Proceeding of Grid-STP 2007, International Workshop on Security, Trust and Privacy in Grid Systems at SecureComm 2007. IEEE Computer Society, (2007), IEEE Catalog Number: 07EX168, ISBN: 1-4244-0975-6.• "XACML Policy Integration Algorithms.", P. Mazzoleni, B. Crispo, S. Sivasubramanian, E. Bertino: , ACM Transactions on Information and System Security (TISSEC), vol.11 n.1, February, 2008.
• “Efficient Integration of Fine-Grained Access Control and Resource Brokering in Grid”. P. Mazzoleni, B. Crispo, S. Sivasubramanian, E. Bertino, The Journal of Supercomputing, Springer Netherlands, October 2008.
• “A Secure Environment for Grid-Based Supply Chains”, L.Blasi, A.Arenas, B.Aziz, P.Mori, U.Rovati, B.Crispo, F.Martinelli, P.Massonet. Published in: Collaboration and the Knowledge Economy: Issues, Applications, Case Studies, P. and M. Cunningham (Eds), IOS Press, 2008 Amsterdam, ISBN 978-1-58603-924-0.
Agenda:
1. Usage Control for Grids (25 minutes).
2. An Architecture for Usage Control in Grids (20 minutes).
3. Usage Control Policies in XACML (45 minutes).
4. Usage Control in Action: Controlling Service Usage in a Grid-Based Content Management System (20 minutes).
5. PolPA: A Usage Control Policy Language for Grids (45 minutes).
6. Usage Control in Action: Controlling Resource Usage in a Grid-Based Supply Chain (25 minutes). -
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Using the ETICS Test System to analyse standard compliance and interoperability of grid software Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe ETICS Tutorial provides an introduction to the ETICS system concepts and features. It describes the ETICS Portal and the ETICS Client and guides the users through basic usage scenarios. It will be shown how ETICS can be used to perform standard compliance testing and interoperabilty testing
The ETICS System is an advanced build and test system designed to facilitate the management of complex distributed software in general and grid software in particular. In this tutorial, users will be given hands-on training on using the ETICS System to perform standard compliance and interoperability tests of software. The tutorial is divided in two parts:- in the first part attendees will be given an introduction to ETICS and its typical usage scenarios using the web appliations and the command-line client.
- in the second part it will be shown how to use ETICS to perform standard compliance testing and how to set up and manage interoperability tests among different middleware implementations including ARC, UNICORE and CREAM
Agenda: - ETICS Overview
- The ETICS Portal and the Web Applications
- Installing the ETICS Client
- Basic usage scenarios
- The ETICS Plugins and their application to compliance analysis
- Setting up and managing distributed tests. The example will show how to tests interoperabilty among ARC, UNICORE and gLite CREAM
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Vulnerability Assessment and Secure Coding Practices for Middleware Tutorial Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaVulnerability Assessment and Secure Coding Practices for Middleware Tutorial (1/2) (90 mins)
James A. Kupsch and Prof. Barton P. MillerSecurity is crucial in the software that we develop and use. This tutorial is relevant to anyone wanting to learn about assessing software for security flaws and for developers wishing to minimize security flaws in software they develop.
We share our experience in vulnerability assessment of real-world grid middleware. You will learn skills critical for developers and analysts concerned about software security, and the importance of independent vulnerability assessment.
The tutorial covers a process to actively discover vulnerabilities. We show how to gather information about a system which is used to direct the search for vulnerabilities, and how to integrate vulnerability assessment and discovery into the development cycle.
Next, we examine coding practices to prevent vulnerabilities by describing more than 20 types of vulnerabilities with examples of how they commonly arise, and techniques to prevent them. Most examples are in C, C++, Perl, and the standard C and POSIX APIs.
This tutorial teaches critical assessment and coding skills. In addition, it discusses policy issues relating to independent auditing, vulnerability reporting, and integrating security fixes into the software release cycle.
The security of software is becoming increasingly important to anyone who uses or develops it. This tutorial teaches developers and assessors how to proactively reduce the number of vulnerabilities in their software. Just as independent QA testing is essential for assessing software reliability, testing for security is essential for assuring software security. Even projects that architect their software with security in mind still need independent vulnerability assessment to detect design flaws or coding problems that can arise in any project. Testing for security is an essential part of the development process and a unique skill that requires training.This tutorial is an outgrowth of our experience in performing vulnerability assessment of a variety of grid middleware, which includes Condor from the University of Wisconsin, the Storage Resource Broker from the San Diego Supercomputer Center, MyProxy from the National Center for Supercomputer Applications, and EGEE's glexec. The tutorial teaches the processes and skills that we developed and used in these activities.
This tutorial is relevant to anyone who wants to learn about analyzing software for security flaws and for developers wishing to minimize security flaws in software that they develop. It covers the two sides of security: the offensive--how to find problems through the use of proactive vulnerability assessment; and the defensive--how to prevent problems by showing many types of vulnerabilities that occur in code and what techniques can be used to prevent them.
The target audience for this tutorial is anyone involved with the development of software, wishing to assess the security of software, or managing the software development process. To gain maximum benefit from this tutorial, attendees should be familiar with the process of developing software and the C programming language, along with a basic knowledge of the standard C library and the POSIX API.
This tutorial does not assume any prior knowledge of security assessment or vulnerabilities. Some of the examples include less common APIs, or are in a programming language other than the C programming language. In these instances, enough explanation is given so the attendee unfamiliar with the topic should be able to understand the concepts.
The first part of this tutorial explains how to perform a vulnerability assessment. Our process is based on a deep assessment of the software, done by one who is working in cooperation with the development team and has access to source code, internal documents and developers. We emphasize understanding of the process of vulnerability assessment and developing the skills needed to conduct such an assessment.
The first step of a vulnerability assessment is to gain an in-depth understanding of the system. Without an understanding of how it works, it is impossible to know what are the critical assets and what are the threats to these assets. To do this, the tutorial shows a process to gather and document this information by performing an architectural, resource and privilege analysis. These steps are completed by meeting with the developers, reviewing design documents and end-user documentation, using the system, and looking at the code.
The architectural analysis consists of discovering and documenting the high level structures of the system: functionality, hosts, configuration parameters, processes, user interaction, interactions between processes, interactions with external systems, other communication channels, resources controlled by processes, and trust between components.
The resource and privilege analysis is the process of discovering and documenting the objects that the system can manipulate, such as in-memory data structures, database records, files, CPU cycles, and physical devices controlled by the computer. It also documents what actions can be performed on the resources in the system. The privilege analysis documents the privilege model defined by the system itself, and the configuration of privileges in the underlying operating system and external applications, such as databases.
The tutorial then shows how to create data flow diagrams from the results of the prior analyses. These diagrams contain much of the information collected earlier in a succinct fashion that allows the analyst to easily comprehend the system.
The tutorial then covers the process of performing a component analysis, which is looking for vulnerabilities in components of the system. Since it is not realistic to completely verify the security of the system, the tutorial shows how to use the previous steps of the analysis to focus the search to find both those that are likely to be easily found by outside attackers, and also those vulnerabilities that can lead to higher value targets such as the compromise of the host operating system or a subversion of the privilege system. Information in the second part of the tutorial explains how to look for specific types of vulnerabilities.
The tutorial also describes how to integrate the results of the vulnerability assessment process into the software development process, including writing vulnerability reports, the vulnerability disclosure process, fixing vulnerabilities, and releasing security updates.
The second part of this tutorial focuses on vulnerabilities. It features several interactive secure coding quizzes where the audience is challenged to find as many vulnerabilities as they can in short code fragments. What the audience finds (and does not find) are then discussed.
This part also contains a discussion of the most common vulnerabilities and is valuable to both developers and security assessors. Descriptions of each vulnerability are presented with examples. It is shown how the vulnerability typically occurs within code, pointing out APIs or techniques that commonly result in the vulnerability, and also how the vulnerability can be mitigated or eliminated through the use of other techniques or APIs. The causes and types of vulnerabilities covered include:
- Lack of data validation
- Error Handling
- Buffer overflows
- Numeric parsing
- Integer vulnerabilities
- Race conditions
- Injection attacks
- Format string attack
- Command injection
- SQL injection
- Cross-site scripting (XSS)
- Directory traversals
- Memory management attacks
- Race conditions
- Denial of service
- Insecure permissions
- Not dropping privileges
- Information leaks
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Lunch 1h 30m
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Welcome to EGEE User Forum/OGF25 & OGF Europe's 2nd International Event - Opening Plenary Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania- 14:00
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Welcome from EGEE - Bob Jones, EGEE-III Project Director 10mSpeaker: Dr Bob Jones (CERN)
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Science in Sicily and the Sicilian Grid - Prof. Francesco Catara – University of Messina 20m"Science in Sicily and the Sicilian Grid" Francesco Catara, University of Catania & Consorzio COMETA Born in Catania, Francesco Catara has been a full professor of Theoretical Physics since 1986. His research activity is mainly in the fields of Quantum Many Body Theories and Nuclear Reaction Theories. The author of 100 scientific papers published in international journals, he has given invited talks in numerous Workshops and Conferences, and has conduced many lecture courses, both at under graduated and post graduated level. He has been referee of the journals: Physical Review, Physical Review Letters and Nuclear Physics A. Director of the Catania branch of INFN in the years 1977-1983 and 2001-2007. Presently President of the Consortium COMETA, which was born from the gathering of the 3 Sicilian Universities and 3 national research institutes operating in Sicily in the fields of Astrophysics (INAF), Nuclear and Subnuclear Physics (INFN), Geology and Volcanology (INVG). The goal of COMETA is to create a grid infrastructure in Sicily, connected to the italian and international grids. This has been achieved and the Sicilian grid is fully operating.Speaker: Francesco Catara
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Coffee 30m
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Cloud and Grid I: Innovation and Operations Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania-
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Cloud Computing: More than a Virtual Stack 45m"Cloud Computing: More than a Virtual Stack" Peter Coffee, Director of Platform Research, salesforce.com Peter Coffee, former Technology Editor of enterprise IT journals PC Week and eWEEK, works with corporate and commercial application developers to build a community based on Force.com: the salesforce.com Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS). He has 26 years' experience in guiding the adoption and management of innovative information technologies and practices as a developer, consultant, educator, and internationally published author. He has provided expert analysis of IT industry issues and events including Internet security, the Microsoft antitrust case and the HP/Compaq acquisition for major news publications and broadcast media; he has been a keynote speaker, workshop leader, moderator or presenter at IT events throughout the U.S. as well as in England, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, China, Singapore, India and Australia. Peter was previously the first manager of PC planning at The Aerospace Corporation, and before that was a Senior Engineer in arctic project management and chemical facility construction for several divisions of Exxon Corporation. He holds an engineering degree from MIT and an MBA from Pepperdine University, and has been a faculty member at Pepperdine and also at UCLA (computer science) and Chapman College (business analytics). He is the author of two books, How to Program Java and Peter Coffee Teaches PCs.Speaker: Peter Coffee
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Global Grid Operations - What it means for the LHC Grid and the HEP Community 45m"Global Grid Operations - What it means for the LHC Grid and the HEP Community" Jamie Shiers BSc, PhD, CERN Jamie Shiers currently leads the Grid Support group in CERN’s IT department. This group plays a leading role in the overall Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) project, acting in many ways as a bridge between sites, services and the experiments, with a strong focus on service and operations. He has worked on many aspects of LHC computing since the early 1990s, moving to the Grid service area in 2005 when he led two major “Service Challenges” designed to help bring the service up to the level required for LHC data taking and analysis. He has been a member of both EGEE and EGI_DS projects and is a member of the Management Board of WLCG. He has authored numerous articles on Grid computing, including comparisons with Clouds from both technical and non-technical viewpoints. Dr. Shiers received a PhD in physics from the University of Liverpool in 1981, following a degree in physics obtained at the University of London (Imperial College) in 1978. He has worked in the IT department at CERN for the past 25 years in a wide variety of positions, including operations, application development and support, databases and data management, as well as various project leadership roles. Prior to this he worked as a research physicist at the Max Planck Institute for Physics in Munich, Germany and as a guest physicist at CERN.Speaker: Dr Jamie Shiers (CERN)
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CAOPS - IGTF Workshop Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaCAOPS - IGTF Workshop (1/3) (90 mins)
Christos Kanellopoulos, Yoshio Tanaka, David Groep
(CAOPS-WG) PresentationThis is the 4th CAOPS - IGTF Workshop. The purpose of the workshop is to discuss issues best practices in Grid CA Operations and the
International Grid Trust Federation (IGTF) -
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Data Management Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaData Management is the most significant challenge to many user communities within EGEE. It also represents one of the main uses of e-infrastructure - the large scale computational analysis of large volumes of data. Many communities are having to develop new techniques and use new services to deal with the 'data deluge' coming from their research activities. Now that the e-infrastructure exists to store and analyse the data, the next challenge for many end-users is how to derive information and gain knowledge from the raw data to meet their research objectives.
The presentations cover two broad areas - the standards being used to provide consistent access to the data management services and the services that form the operational e-infrastructure. These presentations will include:
- how standards from the Open Grid Forum (ByteIO, WSDAIR and RNS) are being used to navigate and access information stored in catalogues, such as the LFC or AMGA, so that these can be accessed from either Windows or Linux.
- how an application community has been validating the operational effectiveness of the infrastructure (both its services and networking links) as part of their distributed data analysis.
- how 3D graphical images of data sets can be analysed using the e-Infrastructure.
- how distributed key storage services can be used to encrypt and store data using the existing e-infrastructure.
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Debugging Data Transfers between CMS Computing Centres 25mThe Debugging Data Transfers (DDT) Task Force was created to coordinate the debugging of data transfer links among WLCG sites supporting the CMS Virtual Organization. The task force aimed to commission the most crucial transfer routes among CMS sites by designing and enforcing a clear procedure to debug problematic links. The preparation, activities and experience of the DDT Task Force are discussed. Common technical problems and challenges encountered are explained and summarized.Speaker: Dr Nicolo Magini (CERN IT-GS-EIS & INFN-CNAF)
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VisIVO: data visualization on the grid. 25mWe present new integrated services offered by VisIVO, a framework for exploration of large-scale scientific datasets. . We show new features of the recently developed VisIVO Server, a command line application for intuitive visual discovery with 3D views being created from data tables.A grid version is ported and deployed in the Cometa Consortium GRID, and can run on worker nodes of this computational grid.Speaker: Ugo Becciani (INAF)
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EGI Policy Board (CLOSED Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania -
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Enterprise Grid Requirement - Research Group Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaEnterprise Grid Requirement - Research Group (90 mins)
Ravi Subramaniam, Toshi Nakata, and Satoshi Itoh
(EGR-RG) Group DiscussionWe extracted requirements for Grid systems. Now we are moving to do gap analysis between requirements and technologies (standardization). We need volunteers for the activities.
Agenda:
* Summarization of public comment for requirement document
* Workshop style discussion
* Discussion for the next step (gap analysis) -
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Grid Research Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAt EGEE-08, EGEE director raised three questions: "How can we reduce the effort required to operate this expanding infrastructure?", "How do we match the expectations of the growing user communities?" and "Will we have a European Infrastructure by the end of 2009?". Some grid research themes are extremely relevant to these questions: fault diagnosis, detection, and tolerance are obviously related to operations; Quality of service (QoS) oriented resource allocation is critical for user satisfaction; both are required to ensure organised resource sharing and avoid fragmentation based on national or community resource ownership.
This session will provide insights on new and exciting work contributing to the above-mentioned goals. As a grid research session, the talks will focus on methods and proof of concepts more than finalised products. Nonetheless, realistic hypothesis and quantitative evaluations are present in all the contributions, thus connecting these works with the day-to-day problems. Benchmarking, which is the basis of a quantitative approach of middleware design, is exemplified. The potential of a Machine Learning (a sub-discipline of Artificial Intelligence) is demonstrated in the areas of, on one hand QoS, and on the other hand, fault diagnosis. Finally, QoS is also addressed through the SLA framework, in a work proposing a new paradigm for resource allocation, which is a hot topic in both grid and cloud research.
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Design of an Expert System for Enhancing Grid Fault Detection based on Grid Monitoring Data 20mGrid computing is associated with a complex, large scale, heterogeneous and distributed environment. The combination of different Grid infrastructures, middleware implementations, and job submission tools into one reliable production system is a challenging task. Given the impracticability to provide an absolutely fail-safe system, focusing on strong error reporting and handling is a crucial part in Grid computing.Speaker: Ms Gerhild Maier (Johannes Kepler Universität Linz)
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Performance Analysis of Existing and Emerging Computing Interfaces for Grid Computing 20mThe Grid interface to a batch system is one of the primary services in a Grid infrastructure. The performance of this interface is of importance for high though-put users and managers of large clusters. This paper defines a benchmarking methodology for evaluating the performance of these interfaces and which is used to benchmark a number of existing and emerging implementations.Speaker: Mr Laurence Field (CERN)
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Toward Responsive Grids through Multi Objective Reinforcement Learning 20mEGEE has experimented in specialized software and configurations, such as priorities, Virtual Reservations and overlay task-management in order to provide differentiated Quality of Service (QoS) requested by an increasingly diverse user community. To combine differentiated QoS, fair-share and self-configuration under a unique production model, we propose a multi objective Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach for site-level dynamic allocation of grid resources, and to validate it using EGEE traces.Speaker: Julien Perez (LRI, CNRS and Université Paris-Sud)
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QoS management in Grids 20mThe grids are opening towards new application scenarios, embracing not only the e-science field but also business, financial and educational ones. This evolution requires that the grids have to be able to supply resources and services in a flexible manner, offering them on-demand to several different typologies of users, each one characterized by specific "Quality of Service (QoS)" requirements. This work treats these new challenges and proposes an innovative resources reservation policy.Speaker: Antonella Di Stefano (DIIT - Catania University)
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17:30
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17:30
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19:00
HPC Profile: Status and next steps Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaHPC Profile: Status and next steps (90 mins)
Marty Humphrey, Chris Smith
(HPCP-WG) Group Discussionreview of current status (incl. SC08 BOF) and next steps
Agenda:
TBD -
17:30
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19:00
OGF 101 Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF101 (90 mins)
(OGF101) Group DiscussionWelcome to the Open Grid Forum!
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17:30
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19:00
OGF Europe PMB - CLOSED Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania -
17:30
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19:00
Portals and End-user Environments Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaScience is the main goal of the EGEE Grid Project, and goals are to run scientific applications on the grid to overtake the current hardware limitations. But before running the scientific applications at a large scale, the first challenge is to port them to the grid, and provide simple access to these grid-enabled applications. At this step, users are looking for tools for the interaction with the grid itself, but also for running complex applications involving for example large bulk jobs, application services and their mixture. Consequently, users seek various mechanisms to shield them from service API or CLI changes and to allow them to use the maximum number of resources. In this way, users are looking for high level interface such as portals and graphical environments to interact to the Grid. Many communities habitually work through web portals or have other mechanisms for easy access to computing or data resources. And portals will certainly be the best way to provide an easier grid-access to the larger par of the scientific communities. There are several different portal and end user environment implementations available and working with gLite.
The section includes four presentations from developers of high level EGEE user environments. WS-PGRADE – to be introduced in the first presentation – is an IDE-like portal to develop grid workflows, parameter studies and other types of complex grid applications, and also to share those structures with end users as “invokable” services. The second presentation shows a technical solution to authenticate grid end users in grid systems using smart cards. Smart cards are used by several companies and also in some countries to identify staff and citizens. Allowing the smart cards to be use in the grid for user authentication would eliminate the sometimes cumbersome X.509 certificates from the loop and would certainly give a boost to the take up of grid technologies by the larger public. The third talk introduces Migrating Desktop, a rich client environment that can extend users’ workspaces with grid middleware services and high level grid application services. Recognizing the general usefulness of the tool, Migrating Desktop has recently became part of the EGEE RESPECT program. The last talk of the session introduces the latest results of the Grid2Win project which aims to integrate Windows based clusters into the computing services of the EGEE grid.
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17:30
WS-PGRADE: the second generation P-GRADE portal 20mAfter the great success of the first generation P-GRADE portal we have created the second generation P-GRADE portal, called WS-PGRADE portal. WS-PGRADE is the user interface service of gUSE (grid User Support Environment) which is a high-level grid middleware to provide a set of services for high-level workflow execution. These services include: workflow engine, workflow storage, data storage, information service, brokering service and various grid submitter services for LCG-2, gLite, GT2, GT4 and BOINC grids.Speaker: Mr Gergely Sipos (MTA SZTAKI)
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17:50
Direct Issuance of Proxy Certificate on P-GRADE Grid Portal without Using MyProxy 20mThis paper will describe both development and deployment experience of a direct proxy certificate issuance from end entity certificate on a smart card to the open grid infrastructure platform without using MyProxy. The idea is to enable the creation and usage of the new proxy certificate within the grid portal and the glite middleware services in aweb environment.Speaker: Mr Kang Siong Ng (MIMOS Berhad)
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18:10
The Migrating Desktop – Framework for Grid Applications 20mThe success of computing technologies depends heavily on ease of use experienced by users that are non-experts in the technology being used. It is also crucial, to attract new scientific and industrial user communities, to enable intuitive access to grid. Key aspects are also interoperations between infrastructures as well as support for applications development. To achieve this goal we propose The Migrating Desktop – an advanced GUI and a set of tools combined with a user-friendly outlook.Speaker: Mr Bartek Palak (Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center)
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18:30
Grid2Win : The Grid for Microsoft Windows 20mNowadays many research domains are capitalizing on grid computing, however, to be able to properly use the current Grid infrastructures, usually it is required that user has advanced skills on Unix based systems. Even if the Linux distributions are in full growth, many users still prefer to use Microsoft Windows. The Grid2Win project aims at "opening" the grid services to Microsoft applications and integrating MS Windows clusters into existing Grid e-Infrastructures.Speaker: Dr elisa ingra (INFN - Catania)
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17:30
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17:30
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19:00
Resource Selection Working Session Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaResource Selection Working Session (90 mins)
Donal Fellows, Alexander Papaspyrou
(OGSA-RSS-WG) Group DiscussionThis session will discuss the current status of the RSS specification drafts and work on progressing them to publication.
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17:30
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19:00
Workflow systems Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaComplete scientific analyses are complex, usually involving multiple stages and multiple applications. As users gain more experience with the grid infrastructure, they look for tools to manage complete analysis workflows. These tools handle the bookkeeping, job execution, and data management, allowing the researcher to concentrate on the science rather than tedious grid details.
Participants in this session will hear presentations that provide a good overview of the available workflow managers and how they can be (easily) used to access resources on the EGEE production grid infrastructure. Each workflow manager is usually optimized for particular use cases and has it's own strengths and weaknesses. Recent work on making workflow managers interoperable may allow users to mix and match them on sub-workflows to optimize a complete analysis.
The agenda provides plenty of time for questions and discussions. Participants should be prepared to share their own experiences with workflow managers and their needs regarding improvements.
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17:30
Enabling the execution of various workflows (Kepler, Taverna, Triana, P-GRADE) on EGEE 20mDifferent communities use different workflow (WF) systems and when they start to use EGEE they would like to run their WFs on EGEE sites. So far this required the porting of the various WF systems to EGEE. With the P-GRADE GEMLCA portal this activity can be reduced to the registration of the required WF engine in the GEMLCA repository. Then users of the WF system can run their WFs via the P-GRADE portal as in their native WF environment, even interconnected with other types of WFs.Speaker: Mr Tamas Kukla (Univ. of Westminster)
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17:50
Workflow management tool for Earth science applications 20mIn this paper, we present workflow management tool for Earth science applications in EGEE. The workflow management tool was originally developed within K-wf Grid project for GT4 middleware and has many advanced features like semi-automatic workflow composition, user-friendly GUI for managing workflows, knowledge management. In EGEE, we are porting the workflow management tool to gLite middleware for Earth science applicationsSpeaker: Viet Tran (Institute of Informatics, Slovakia)
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18:10
SchedScripter: Workflows for Grid-based Human Resources Scheduling Applications 20mSchedScripter is a web services based, BPEL workflow framework for distributed scheduling applications over a Grid environment. It provides abstract constructs and communication patterns for the distributed scheduling application components. In this contribution, we discuss our experiences from the adaptation of an examination timetabling problem as a grid based application SchedScripter. The application used EGEE resources from the South Eastern Europe federation.Speaker: Mr George Goulas (University of Patras, Electrical & Computer Engineering Department)
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18:30
An Interoperable Grid Workflow Management System 20mA large-scale simulation experiment in e-Science can be modeled by using a workflow. A Workflow Management System (WFMS), developed at University of Salento in Lecce, initially implemented as a client-server system in the 2004, has been recently re-enginered for scheduling and monitoring the jobs in a heterogeneous Computational Grid based on the gLite, Unicore and Globus middleware. Currently, we are testing our system on bioinformatics case studies in the LIBI ProjectSpeaker: Dr Maria Mirto (SPACI Consortium & University of Salento Lecce)
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17:30
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09:00
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10:30
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09:00
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10:30
Grid Application Experiences Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania-
09:00
Standards meet application for the Earth Sciences domain 45m"Standards meet application for the Earth Sciences domain" Stefano Nativi, Coordinator of the Earth and Space Science Informatics Laboratory - Italian National Research Council (CNR-IMAA) He received a 1st and 2nd (Laurea) degree and a Ph.D from the University of Florence (IT). He had a PDRA grant from the University of Bristol (UK). He is President of the Earth and Space Sciences Informatics (ESSI) division of the European Geosciences Union (EGU). He is co-leader of GEOSS IP3 (Interoperability Process Pilot Project), co-chair of the Climate Change & Biodiversity WG of GEOSS AIP-2 (Architecture Implementation Pilot – phase 2), and member of the core GEOSS Standards and Interoperability Forum (SIF). He is member of the “Metadata Core Drafting Team” for the Implementing Rules of the INSPIRE initiative. He coordinates the ESSI Laboratory of the Institute of Methodologies Environmental Analysis of the Italian National Research Council (CNR - IMAA). He is member of the National Inter-university Consortium for Telecommunications (CNIT) Scientific Committee. He is professor of “Web services management” (University of Florence - Faculty of Electronic and Telecommunications Engineering, Information Engineering 1st degree). He is professor of “Systems for land management” (University of Padua -Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics 2nd degree). He is Co-PI of the OGC GALEON (Geo-interface to Atmosphere, Land, Earth, Ocean netCDF) IE.Speaker: Stefano Nativi
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09:45
Internal Grid experiences in Monte dei Paschi di Siena Group 20m"Internal Grid experiences in Monte dei Paschi di Siena Group" Piero Poccianti, Competence & Innovation Center Leader, Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena Piero Poccianti has been involved in Information Technology projects since 1976. From 1980 to 1999 he has been working as IT manager in Banca Toscana, having in charge the following main topics: - Office Automation Projects (1990-1994) - Evolution and renewal of the Branch Architecture for “Banca Toscana” and “Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena” banks within MPS Group (1995-1999). Since 1999 up to 2001 he has been involved in “Consorzio Operativo Gruppo MPS” (the company providing information system services for all the companies inside the MPS Group). In his role he has guided the design and development phases of the new banks’ Multichannel Architecture. He currently has the role of Competence & Innovation Center Leader as Director within the Consorzio MPS. In his current position he has the responsibility of all research activities within the MPS Group. Identifying new paradigms and promising/innovative technologies for the evolution of Information Systems of the Group are the main goals of the Competence Center Team. The Competence Center Group, currently named “Osservatorio Tecnologico” is in the staff of the General Manager of the Consorzio MPS. Piero Poccianti is also member of the Council of Artificial Intelligence Italian Association.Speaker: Piero Poccianti
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09:00
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10:30
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11:00
Coffee 30m
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11:00
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12:30
CAOPS - IGTF Workshop Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaCAOPS - IGTF Workshop (1/3) (90 mins)
Christos Kanellopoulos, Yoshio Tanaka, David Groep
(CAOPS-WG) PresentationThis is the 4th CAOPS - IGTF Workshop. The purpose of the workshop is to discuss issues best practices in Grid CA Operations and the
International Grid Trust Federation (IGTF) -
11:00
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12:30
Cloud Computing API BoF Session Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania(90 mins)
Cloud Computing API BoF Session
Thijs Metsch (Sun Microsystems) and Ignacio M. Llorente (UCM)
(Cloud Computing API) Charter-Discussion BOFVirtualization has brought about a new utility computing model, called "Infrastructure-as -a-Service" (IaaS) cloud computing, for the on-demand provision of virtualized resources as a service. There are several examples of cloud providers of elastic capacity, offering an interface for remote management of virtualized server instances within their proprietary infrastructure. Equally, there is now growing interest in open-source cloud-computing tools that, providing commercial cloud compatible interfaces, let organizations build and customize there own cloud infrastructure.
This BoF session will focus on the charter and the creation of a Group inside OGF to work on the development of an API specification for the dynamic deployment, using an appropriate descriptor language, control and monitor of virtual machines. The scope of the specification will be all the high level functionality required for the life-cycle management of virtual machines which is needed to support automated service elasticity. The new specification will facilitate the integration of the service management components that are being built on top of cloud infrastructures.
Because we expect an important participation of the Cloud community at OGF25, we believe that a BOF session will provide the opportunity for attendees with similar interests to discuss engagement and next steps.
Agenda:
- Interfaces for remote management of VMs
- Charter discussion -
11:00
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12:30
Data Management Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaData Management is the most significant challenge to many user communities within EGEE. It also represents one of the main uses of e-infrastructure - the large scale computational analysis of large volumes of data. Many communities are having to develop new techniques and use new services to deal with the 'data deluge' coming from their research activities. Now that the e-infrastructure exists to store and analyse the data, the next challenge for many end-users is how to derive information and gain knowledge from the raw data to meet their research objectives.
The presentations cover two broad areas - the standards being used to provide consistent access to the data management services and the services that form the operational e-infrastructure. These presentations will include:
- how standards from the Open Grid Forum (ByteIO, WSDAIR and RNS) are being used to navigate and access information stored in catalogues, such as the LFC or AMGA, so that these can be accessed from either Windows or Linux.
- how an application community has been validating the operational effectiveness of the infrastructure (both its services and networking links) as part of their distributed data analysis.
- how 3D graphical images of data sets can be analysed using the e-Infrastructure.
- how distributed key storage services can be used to encrypt and store data using the existing e-infrastructure.
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11:00
Grid Interoperation: SRM-SRB Development 20mStorage Resource Manager (SRM) is based on a common interface specification, which is a widely adopted interface to the storage management system of production grids currently. With the heterogeneity of the Grid, the best way to share data is to integrate data sources through SRM. In this project, the SRM services for SRB is developed, to make the popular SRB data grid system interoperable with the EGEE infrastructure and support the SRM services for SRB, such as space reservation and VO support etc.Speaker: Mr Wei-Long Ueng (Academia Sinica Grid Computing)
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11:20
New Developments in the AMGA Metadata Catalogue 20mWe present an overview of the latest developments in the AMGA metadata catalogue that have been made available with the AMGA 1.9 release and take a look at the upcoming AMGA 2.0 production release. The most prominent new features include the more scalable backend, the WS-DAIR support and native SQL queries. To exemplify their value for the EGEE community existing use cases will be shown.Speaker: Dr Birger Koblitz (CERN-IT)
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11:40
Standards-based Access to LFCs 20mWe present two web services that provide standards-based access to grid data registered in LCG File Catalogs. These services use gLite APIs to implement Open Grid Forum standards. The SNARL (Standards-based Naming for Accessing Resources in LFCs) service implements the Resource Namespace Service (RNS) specification while the SABLE (Standards-based Access to Bytes of LFC Entries) service implements the ByteIO specification. These services lay the foundation for interoperability with other grids.Speaker: Karolina Sarnowska (University of Virginia)
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12:00
Mounting the Grid into the UNIX and Windows File Systems 20mIn our work, we mount the Grid directly into the UNIX and Windows environments. Specifically, we enable access to files registered in LCG File Catalogs (LFCs), the file catalog technology currently used in the EGEE Grid. We accomplish this by utilizing existing Open Grid Forum (OGF) standards-based technologies. By grafting the Grid onto a familiar file system infrastructure, we increase ease-of-use and expand the Grid’s reach to more users.Speaker: Karolina Sarnowska (University of Virginia)
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11:00
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12:30
Fusion Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe usage of grid infrastructures for fusion research has provided interesting results that open themselves new lines of research. There is an important number of applications running in the grid with different schemes and structures, which has allowed to gain experience in porting different types of codes. For instance, we can find sequential applications, PIC codes and optimisation procedures based upon genetic algorithms. The use of the grid for data management is totally new in fusion and the results of this pilot experience will be shown in this session. Finally, an experience of a complex workflow between an application that runs in a share memory computer and in the grid will be also presented. This last experience opens a wide range of possibilities for building complex workflows among different types of applications that run in different infrastructures.
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11:00
Improvements on the EGEE fusion code FAFNER-2 25mFAFNER is a 3D code that simulates by Monte Carlo methods the Neutral Beam Injection (NBI) technology that was developed in the late 70's and is now the main heating method for most of the fusion experiments worldwide. The code has been already ported to the grid (see EGEE08 conference) by the authors and this work describes the improvements that have been put into the code, i.e. DRMAA and GridWay implementation.Speakers: Mr ANTONIO JUAN RUBIO-MONTERO (CIEMAT), Mr MANUEL RODRIGUEZ (CIEMAT), Dr RAFAEL MAYO (CIEMAT)
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11:25
Parameter Scan for PIC simulations 25mBit1 is an application to perform Particle-in-Cell (PIC) simulations. This application represents a powerful tool for plasma studies having a number of advantages like the fully kinetic description of high-dimensional plasma and the ability to incorporate complicated atomic and plasma-surface interactions. PIC simulations are used in practically all branches of plasma physics. In cases where deep studies and many tests must be carried out, the grid is an ideal environment for the work.Speaker: Dr Francisco Castejon (CIEMAT)
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11:50
Fusion data management in the Grid 25mModern Fusion community has a lot of data collecting and processing tools, tens of fusion facilities, data storages and computing resources. Nevertheless, there is some lack of integration of all this arsenal inside the community. Data management tools enable the integration on the Grid of data, modeling codes and the knowledge base of European fusion laboratories. In our research we have developed a lightweight solution for the manipulation of fusion data in the Grid.Speaker: Mr Nikolay Marusov (RRC "Kurchatov Institute")
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11:00
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11:00
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12:30
GSM-WG Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGSM-WG I (90 mins)
Jens Jensen
(GSM-WG) Group DiscussionThe aim of this session is to review the existing progress towards standardisation and the current issues wrt use of the protocol in the existing implementations.
Agenda:
tbd. -
11:00
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12:30
Grid programming Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe gLite middleware targets only the foundation and some selected high-level services of the EGEE Grid infrastructure, covering the essential abstractions needed to enable it. On top of the basic gLite interfaces, more advanced solutions can be develop to facilitate the
access to the Grid, both to end users and application developers. These solutions can be higher-level abstractions, sophisticated tools or more intuitive programming environments.The contributions in the first part of the Grid Programming session present client-side high-level interfaces, in particular addressing the OGF-standard SAGA API. The contributions in the second part present tools and frameworks that facilitate typical Grid operations or provide an alternative job management approach. The session also features a presentation on the security aspects of gLite and how they will evolve in the future.
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11:00
Grid Security: Current Status and Future Development 25mWe give an overview on the current status and future development of the Grid Security infrastructure. In the presentation we will adopt the user's view: how a user interacts with the security components of the grid middleware and explain the advantages and disadvantages of the current PKI-based security. In the outlook we will present current trends in the area of security and how this may impact the user in the future.Speaker: Christoph Witzig (SWITCH)
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11:25
An Extension to the SAGA Service Discovery API 25mThe work presented is being undertaken as part of the Simple API for Grid Applications (SAGA) group within the OGF. SAGA aims to provide simple middleware–independent APIs for grid users. This paper outlines the current SAGA Service Discovery API, which provides a means of selecting a set of services based on a number filters; and then goes on to propose an extension that allows access to all information related to the selected service.Speaker: Dr Antony Wilson (RAL)
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11:50
An Approach to Grid Interoperability using Ganga 25mWe present our work on Grid interoperability using Ganga. A Gridway backend module was developed to provide access to globus-based grid resources as well. We have also developed an intergrid backend that allows users to submit jobs that have access to both glite-based resources and globus-based resources. In order to demonstrate the usefulness of the new intergrid backend plugin module, we have integrated the WISDOM autodock application into Ganga as a new built-in application plugin module.Speaker: Dr Soonwook Hwang (KISTI)
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11:00
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11:00
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12:30
GridRPC WG meeting Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGridRPC WG meeting (90 mins)
Eddy Caron
(GRIDRPC-WG) Group DiscussionDiscuss on GridRPC API.
We'd like to finish discussion on data handle.
Agenda:
- discuss on data_handle
- show prototype data_handle implementation
- propose data management API that helps implementation of data_handle -
11:00
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12:30
JSDL General Session Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaJSDL General Session (90 mins)
Stephen McGough, Andreas Savva
(JSDL-WG) Group DiscussionUpdate on JSDL-WG activities and discussion of new work items
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11:00
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12:30
Monitoring Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe EGEE Production Service is a large multi-science Grid infrastructure, federating some 260 resource centres world-wide, providing more than 92.000 cores and several Petabytes of storage. This infrastructure is used on a daily basis by thousands of scientists federated in over 200 Virtual Organisations, which are dependent on such a working grid infrastructure. Their ability to effectively utilise the infrastructure is, to a great degree, conditioned by the quality and range of the operational tools available to maintain a high quality of service. Among these are the Grid Monitoring tools, used for the oversight of the Grid infrastructure at a grid-wide, regional, site and VO level to help improve the reliability, and to provide VO managers, users and grid operations with views allowing them to understand the current and historical status of the service.
This 4th User forum monitoring session will give an overview of the most recent implementations in the grid monitoring tools area, which bring scalability, reliability and many advantages to grid users and VO managers. Talks will highlight how tools enable users to watch in detail production activities, to track jobs throughout their lifetime, to aggregate VO specific views, all this through well defined interfaces and portals.
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11:00
The Site Status Board 20mThe Site Status Board (SSB) is a monitoring application that allows a virtual organization to have an overview of the current situation of all the centers that participate in the collaboration. The status of the sites is calculated by combining metrics defined by the administrator. All these metrics are kept in a database so as to be able to display how the values evolve over time. Moreover, the SSB also keeps links with more information about the metrics.Speaker: Pablo Saiz (CERN)
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11:20
A high level monitoring tool for the site performance 20mThe CCRC08 experience was a very valuable benchmark for testing all Grid activities related to LHC experiments. In particular, it gave the opportunity to test the monitoring infrastructure and to evaluate its functionality both from the experiments and the sites point of view. On the basis of the feedback provided by site administrators, a new high level monitoring tool has been designed, which should offer an overall view of the computing activities of the experiments at the site.Speaker: Dr Elisa Lanciotti (European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN))
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11:40
SAM Test Results, Availability and Reliability Visualisation Portal 20mThe portal's main purpose is to provide each Virtual Organisation (VO) with a customised view of the SAM (Service Availability Monitoring) test results and other metrics such as availability (as defined by Gridview). The objective here is to comply with the different needs of the VOs in terms of site naming convention and test criticality. The portal, based on the Dashboard framework, is a complementary tool to help VO administrators to locate site problems and to estimateSpeaker: Pablo Saiz (CERN)
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12:00
Evolution of SAM in an enhanced model for monitoring the EGEE grid 20mThe SAM monitoring system enables grid administrators to track availability of resources and receive alarms in case of failure of services. We describe an enhanced, distributed, multi-level monitoring system for the EGEE grid. The core of the system consists of commodity technologies: Nagios for the monitoring framework, and the Active MQ messaging system for interconnecting components. We integrated them tightly with the grid information system, and extended them with grid-specific probes.Speakers: Emir Imamagic (SRCE), Emir Imamagic (SRCE), Emir Imamagic (SRCE)
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11:00
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11:00
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12:30
NML-WG session Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaNML-WG session 1 (90 mins)
Martin Swany and Jeroen van der Ham
(NML-WG) Group DiscussionSession 1 of the NML-WG
Agenda:
tbd -
12:30
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14:00
Lunch 1h 30m
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14:00
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15:30
Activity instance document schema Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaActivity instance document schema (90 mins)
Philipp Wieder, Steve McGough, Andreas Savva
(JSDL-WG) Group DiscussionWorking session on the activity instance document schema
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14:00
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15:30
CAOPS - IGTF Workshop Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaCAOPS - IGTF Workshop (1/3) (90 mins)
Christos Kanellopoulos, Yoshio Tanaka, David Groep
(CAOPS-WG) PresentationThis is the 4th CAOPS - IGTF Workshop. The purpose of the workshop is to discuss issues best practices in Grid CA Operations and the
International Grid Trust Federation (IGTF) -
14:00
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15:30
EGEE Collaboration Board (CLOSED, on invitation only) Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania -
14:00
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15:30
Fusion Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe usage of grid infrastructures for fusion research has provided interesting results that open themselves new lines of research. There is an important number of applications running in the grid with different schemes and structures, which has allowed to gain experience in porting different types of codes. For instance, we can find sequential applications, PIC codes and optimisation procedures based upon genetic algorithms. The use of the grid for data management is totally new in fusion and the results of this pilot experience will be shown in this session. Finally, an experience of a complex workflow between an application that runs in a share memory computer and in the grid will be also presented. This last experience opens a wide range of possibilities for building complex workflows among different types of applications that run in different infrastructures.
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14:00
Porting fusion applications for Russian Data Intensive Grid 25mNew 3 applications were ported in the RFUSION VO within the EGEE-III project. Grid technology was applied for tokamak plasma geometry optimization (earlier the same techniques was used for stellarators), for modeling turbulence behavior near the plasma edge in tokamak T-10 and modeling formation of carbon nanotubes at the surface of vacuum discharge chambers in thermonuclear installations. Grid computing has been demonstrated to be very useful for these tasks.Speakers: Dr Igor Semenov (RRC "Kurchatov Institute"), Mr Nikolay Marusov (RRC "Kurchatov Institute")
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14:25
Vashra-T: Grid Ray Tracing for the Fusion Physics ASTRA Code 25mThe ASTRA code, which has been developed at Kurchatov Inst. and IPP-Garching, solves diffusion equations subject to magnetic fusion plasmas. This code is being run on a shared memory machine at CIEMAT, which makes it difficult to scale. To begin with, after analyzing the different external modules called by ASTRA, a Ray Tracing one was chosen for Grid execution. In this way, all jobs related to Ray Tracing will run onto the Grid, increasing their number and the module's level of parallelism.Speaker: Prof. Jose Luis Vazquez-Poletti (Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain))
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14:50
Evolutionary algorithms to improve plasma confinement 25mThe use of evolutionary and genetic algorithms to improve the configuration of nuclear fusion devices is an optimal approach thanks to grid computing, as compared to other approaches such as brute-force algorithms. The computational cost of the application used to improve the equilibrium, one of the characteristics of fusion devices, means that the use of grid becomes fundamental to carrying out our researches.Speaker: Antonio Gómez-Iglesias (CIEMAT)
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14:00
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14:00
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15:30
GFS-WG RNS & File Catalog Standardization Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania(90 mins)
Osamu Tatebe
(GFS-WG) Group DiscussionDiscussion about RNS 1.1 and File Catalog Standardization
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GSM-WG Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGSM-WG I (90 mins)
Jens Jensen
(GSM-WG) Group DiscussionThe aim of this session is to review the existing progress towards standardisation and the current issues wrt use of the protocol in the existing implementations.
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Grid Interoperation Now - Update & Applications Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGrid Interoperation Now - Update & Applications (90 mins)
Morris Riedel, Laurence Field
(GIN-CG) PresentationThis session will highlight some recent activities of the Grid Interoperation Now (GIN) community group including SC 2008 demonstrations and provides information about the relationship to the recently formed spin-off activity Production Grid Infrastructure (PGI).
The second part of the session will discuss some real e-science applications that require the interoperability of Grid infrastructures using open standards.
Agenda:
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Update on GIN Activities & Link to PGI(2)
GIN Applications(3)
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Grid Programming Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe gLite middleware targets only the foundation and some selected high-level services of the EGEE Grid infrastructure, covering the essential abstractions needed to enable it. On top of the basic gLite interfaces, more advanced solutions can be develop to facilitate the
access to the Grid, both to end users and application developers. These solutions can be higher-level abstractions, sophisticated tools or more intuitive programming environments.The contributions in the first part of the Grid Programming session present client-side high-level interfaces, in particular addressing the OGF-standard SAGA API. The contributions in the second part present tools and frameworks that facilitate typical Grid operations or provide an alternative job management approach. The session also features a presentation on the security aspects of gLite and how they will evolve in the future.
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Testing and Benchmarking Grid Infrastructures using the g-Eclipse Framework 25mThe dynamic and heterogeneous nature of the Grid frequently causes the degradation in the expected Quality of Service (QoS). Therefore, there is a need for developing interactive tools that enable Grid users to on-demand test and benchmark Grid services and resources. The g-Eclipe framework provides plugins that allow the execution of tests and benchmarks that evaluate the availability, reliability and performance of Grid resources.Speaker: Mr Nicholas Loulloudes (University of Cyprus)
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Work Binder Application Service 25mWork Binder is a generic grid service that can quickly provide grid jobs to users. Through its simple API, it also supports interactivity between the end user and the job. It is aimed for use with three specific types of grid jobs: interactive jobs that require communication with the user; dynamic workflows consisting of many jobs with short execution time that could be reused; jobs with critical demand for start-up time. It is being developed and used by the members of SEE-GRID-SCI project.Speaker: Dr Branko Marovic (University of Belgrade)
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Uniform access to grid infrastructures with JSAGA 25mJSAGA is a Java implementation of the OGF SAGA (Simple API for Grid Application) and JSDL (Job Submission Description Language) specifications, which enables efficient and uniform usage of existing grid infrastructures such as EGEE, OSG, DEISA and NAREGI.Speaker: Mr Sylvain Reynaud (CNRS)
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Monitoring Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe EGEE Production Service is a large multi-science Grid infrastructure, federating some 260 resource centres world-wide, providing more than 92.000 cores and several Petabytes of storage. This infrastructure is used on a daily basis by thousands of scientists federated in over 200 Virtual Organisations, which are dependent on such a working grid infrastructure. Their ability to effectively utilise the infrastructure is, to a great degree, conditioned by the quality and range of the operational tools available to maintain a high quality of service. Among these are the Grid Monitoring tools, used for the oversight of the Grid infrastructure at a grid-wide, regional, site and VO level to help improve the reliability, and to provide VO managers, users and grid operations with views allowing them to understand the current and historical status of the service.
This 4th User forum monitoring session will give an overview of the most recent implementations in the grid monitoring tools area, which bring scalability, reliability and many advantages to grid users and VO managers. Talks will highlight how tools enable users to watch in detail production activities, to track jobs throughout their lifetime, to aggregate VO specific views, all this through well defined interfaces and portals.
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MSG - A Messaging system for efficient and scalable grid monitoring 20mThe MSG (Messaging System for the Grid) is a set of tools that make a Message Oriented platform available for communication between grid components. It has been adopted by the EGEE Operations Automation Team as an integration platform to improve the reliability and scalability of the existing operational services.Speaker: James Casey (CERN)
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AMon - job-centric monitoring for Grid users 20mSubmitting hundreds or thousands of jobs to gLite is no problem - to keep an eye on these jobs is more difficult. The AMon monitoring system was developed to help end users to get information on their jobs. Job specific data are collected directly on the worker nodes and are presented to the user as interactive graphic displays in a browser. Beside overviews and job details, job output and information on resource usage AMon gives hints on possible problems of the jobs.Speaker: Dr Ralph Müller-Pfefferkorn (TU Dresden, Center for Information Services and High Performance Computing)
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Django dashboard and Grid production monitoring for the VO AUGER 20mEvery Grid user who wishes to run production with more than a few tens of jobs per week realizes that sometimes it turns out that not everything goes the way he wants, and that a monitoring tool, which clearly states what is the current production status, how many and which jobs have to be resubmitted, is missing. We have developed a dashboard based on the Django Web Framework which has been successfully used for monitoring the production with more than 50,000 jobs over the past year.Speakers: Ms Jaroslava Schovancova (Institute of Physics, ASCR v.v.i. and CESNET), Dr Jiri Chudoba (Institute of Physics, ASCR v.v.i. and CESNET)
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NML-WG session Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaNML-WG session 1 (90 mins)
Martin Swany and Jeroen van der Ham
(NML-WG) Group DiscussionSession 1 of the NML-WG
Agenda:
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Coffee 30m
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Demo Session Foyer
Foyer
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania-
16:00
The new WISDOM production environment 12mThe WISDOM environment has evolved continuously to take advantage of the Grid computing and storage resources for large scale drug discovery applications. The environment, thanks to its flexibility and its simplicity, enables the integration of multiple softwares and the deployment on different grid infrastructures (EGEE, OSG). The new version of the environment combines tools within the same framework with workload management and data management.Speakers: Mr Jean Salzemann (CNRS/IN2P3), Mr Matthieu Reichstadt (CNRS/IN2P3), Mr Vincent Bloch (CNRS/IN2P3)
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The Climate-G testbed: towards a large scale data sharing environment for climate change 12mClimate-G is a distributed testbed for climate change addressing challenging data and metadata management issues at a very large scale. It involves: CMCC, IPSL, SCAI, NCAR, Univ. of Reading, Univ. of Catania and Univ. of Salento. It provides P2P/grid metadata services, data access services, visualization tools, etc. The main scope of Climate-G is to allow scientists to carry out geographical and cross-institutional data discovery, access, visualization and sharing of climate data.Speakers: Prof. Giovanni Aloisio (Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Climate Change (CMCC) & University of Salento, Lecce, Italy), Dr Sandro Fiore (Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Climate Change (CMCC) & University of Salento, Lecce, Italy)
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16:24
Using Grids to support Recommender Systems: porting Collaborative Filtering recommendations on gLite 12mRecommender systems (RS) are best known for their use in e-commerce websites to provide a list of tailored items to the customers. However, such systems requires computations that grow polynomially with the number of users and products. For a large retailer like Amazon.com, with tens of millions of customers and millions of catalog items, generate recommendations requires a big computing power. The proposed work aims at presenting a "gridified" implementation of a classic RS algorithm.Speaker: Mr Leandro Ciuffo (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
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Scaling out EGEE sites on Amazon EC2 with OpenNebula 12mThe demonstration will show how virtualization can be used to transform a physical cluster into a flexible and elastic virtual infrastructure, separating resource provisioning from job execution management, and supporting the dynamic adaptation of a virtual EGEE site to the users’ computational demands. The virtual infrastructure, managed by the OpenNebula VM Manger, will run on local and Cloud resources, so automatically scaling out the local infrastructure in order to meet peak demands.Speaker: Dr Ignacio Martin Llorente (Universidad Complutense)
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16:48
DrugScreener-G: an Integrated Environment for Grid-enabled Large-Scale Virtual Screening with Tools for Computer-Aided Drug Design and Modeling 12mDrugScreener-G is an integrated environment for virtual screening, which implements the basic ideas of Grid-enabled large-scale virtual screening of the WISDOM project into a concrete software. DrugScreener-G is easily extensible with plug-ins. DrugScreener-G hides details of Grid computing from users by using web services in communication with the WISDOM Production Environment to manage and perform the docking simulations on the EGEE infrastructure, and to get the results back to users.Speakers: Dr Jincheol Kim (Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information), Mr Sehoon Lee (Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information), Dr Soonwook Hwang (Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information)
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Integrating pilot-jobs, workflows and virtual resource browser to foster medical image analysis on EGEE 12mWe present the integration of the DIANE pilot-job framework within the MOTEUR workflow engine. Coupled with the VBrowser-MOTEUR integration presented at the 3rd User Forum, the resulting system offers a responsive high-level interface to gLite, bringing the infrastructure closer to end-user requirements. The system is demonstrated on medical imaging applications developed at Creatis-LRMN, including irradiation simulation with ThIS, MRI simulation with Simri and cardio-vascular analysis with CAVIAR.Speakers: Sorina Camarasu-Pop (Creatis-LRMN), Tristan Glatard (Creatis-LRMN)
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The ASTRA project: reconstructing the ancient epigonion on the GRID with EUMEDCONNECT and GEANT2 12mASTRA (Ancient instruments Sound/Timbre Reconstruction Application) brings history to life. It takes archaeological findings of extinct musical instruments, and lets us play them again thanks to a virtual digital model running on the GRID Using archaeological data as input (for example fragments from excavations, written descriptions, pictures on ancient urns), a complex digital audio rendering technique models the sound of the instrument.Speaker: Dr Domenico Vicinanza (DANTE - ASTRA project)
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CoPS - The Complex Comparison of Protein Structures supported by grid 12mThe presentation shows results and benefits from a gridification of a data- and compute-intensive application CoPS, a system designed for complex comparison of protein structures using the Evolutionary Secondary Structures Matching (ESSM) algorithm. The CoPS is developed and used by the Baltic States research communities. Usage of the BalticGrid-II infrastructure significantly improve the outcome of the research. The CoPS is run within the Migrating Desktop -intuitive interface to Grid resourcesSpeakers: Mr Bartosz Palak (Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center), Ms Dana Ludviga (Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science University of Latvia, SigmaNet)
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17:48
Monitoring the LHC Experiments Distributed Computing with the Service Level Status 12mThis contribution will describe how part of the monitoring of the LHC experiments Grid and the specific services can be integrated into the Service Level Status (SLS) framework.Speaker: Dr Alessandro Di Girolamo (CERN)
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The HEP-Fusion technology transfer using Ganga and DIANE in the EGEE Grid 12mWe demonstrate the enabling aspect of the technologies originally developed for running High Energy Physics applications on the EGEE Grid. We show two applications: a Geant 4 simulation used in the dosimetric studies and the ISDEP application used for the calculation of the kinetic transport in TJ-II, ITER and LHD. The key components are the Ganga and DIANE tools which provide the job management interface and the optimization framework respectively.Speakers: Mr Francisco Castejón (Laboratorio Nacional de Fusión-Asociación, Euratom/Ciemat, Madrid 28040, Spain), Mr Jakub MOSCICKI (CERN), Mr José Luis Velasco (Instituto de Biocomputación y Física de Sistemas Complejos, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza 50009, Spain &Departamento de Física Teórica, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza 50009, Spain), Mrs Patricia Mendez (CERN)
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Medical Data Manager use case: 3D medical images analysis workflow. 12mComplex medical workflows can run on the grid to process 2D and 3D medical images from a DICOM compliant systems such as a PACS(Picture Archiving and Communication Systems) through the Medical Data Manager(MDM).The MDM, developed in the context of the EGEE project, provides a grid storage interface and ensures medical data protection through strict data access control, anonymization and encryption.It's an important milestone towards the adoption of grid technologies in the medical imaging community.Speaker: Dr Romain Texier (EGEE-CNRS-I3S)
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18:24
Digital Libraries on the Grid to preserve cultural heritage 12mA digital library platform is presented to deploy big digital repositories of ancient documents on a grid infrastructure. In particular, this work will focus on a digital archive coming from the humanistic and musical communities, showing how the Grid is ideal to save a large set of old manuscripts and musical scores to achieve digital preservation of cultural heritageSpeaker: Dr Antonio Calanducci (INFN Catania)
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18:36
The e-NMR GRID platform for structural biology. 12me-NMR aims at deploying and unifying the NMR computational infrastructure in system biology (EU 7th framework program, Contract no. 213010). We will demonstrate the e-NMR portal, which aims at providing the European and worldwide biomolecular NMR and structural biology communities with a user friendly, GRID-enabled platform. e-NMR will integrate and streamline the computational approaches in life sciences, and will allow users to tackle new challenges by exploiting the power of grid computing.Speakers: Dr Alexandre Bonvin (Utrecht University), Dr Dario Carotenuto (Magnetic Resonance Center, University of Florence), Dr Marco Verlato (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Sez. di Padova), Dr Stefano Dal Pra’ (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Sez. di Padova), Dr Tsjerk Wassenaar (Utrecht University)
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Supporting EGEE VOs by Desktop Grids Using EDGeS technologies 12mEDGeS developed a bridge technology by which any EGEE VO can be extended with BOINC and XtremWeb based Desktop Grid (DG) systems. The demo shows how to extend an EGEE VO with such DG systems. EDGeS has also developed an application porting methodology by which EGEE applications can be ported to DGs. We also show this methodology and its usage for the EMMIL application. Finally, we show the new generation of P-GRADE portal (gUSE) that enables the easy access of EGEE VOs and the connected DGs.Speakers: Prof. Peter Kacsuk (MTA SZTAKI), Dr Robert Lovas (MTA SZTAKI), Mr Tamas Kiss (Univ. Westminster)
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The Synthetic spectra modeling under GRIDCOM interface 12mWe present SYNTSPEC – the stellar spectra modeling tool. This gridified tool for stellar spectra analysis is as an example of a data- and compute-intensive application running on the testbed of the EU BalticGrid-II Project (http://www.balticgrid.org), which brings new quality to the research in astrophysics. The multi job application is run within the Gridcom system – the user friendly interface that allows common working of the geographically distributed scientific group.Speakers: Prof. Grazina Tautvaisiene (ITPA VU), Mr Sarunas Mikolaitis (ITPA VU)
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The D4Science Monitoring Tool 12mThe D4Science project is delivering an e-Infrastructure built upon the EGEE infrastructure and the gLite middleware. D4Science promotes the management of dynamically generated applications, a.k.a Virtual Research Environments (VRE), capable to exploit different types of resources ranging from computing and storage facilities to data and services autonomically aggregated in workflows. The D4Science monitoring tool, an important of such e-Infrastructure, is demonstrated in an application environmentSpeaker: Dr pasquale pagano (CNR-ISTI)
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Warning operations enhancement by Grid technology – GALHTAIR : a platform dedicated to the flash flood in the south of France 12mThis demonstration presents an operational flash flood forecasting platform which has been developed in the framework of the FP6 European Project CYCLOPS. During this two-year project, two Civil Protection use-cases have been developed and ported on the EGEE grid infrastructure. Here is presented the porting of a Flash floods forecasting application, called G-ALHTAÏR, used by the French Grand Delta flood forecasting service (SPCGD) and making use of grid-enabled open standard services (OGC)Speaker: Mr vincent thierion (LGEI-EMA)
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Robot Certificates and VisualGrid with GENIUS Grid Portal 12mRemote access to computing services creates new opportunities for researchers to bring existing applications to higher levels of usability and performance. Unfortunately the know-how necessary to access these modern e-Infrastructure is not trivial. Grid portals and robot certificates can simplify the grid access especially for non-expert users. Moreover, many grid applications produce images that can be collected and encoded as a unique video using the on-line streaming tool embedded in the portal at run time.Speaker: Dr Giuseppe La Rocca (GILDA)
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EGEE/EGI/DEISA/PRACE/GEANT meeting (CLOSED) Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMeeting of 3rd March 2009, Catania. Bob Jones, Steven Newhouse EGEE Ludek Matyska, Jürgen Knobloch, Dieter Kranzlmüller EGI Hermann Lederer, Wolfgang Gentzsch DEISA Leif Laaksonen, Martin Polak, Peter Kunszt PRACE Hans Döbling, DANTE David Foster, TERENA Meeting chair: Bob Jones Notes: Peter Kunszt The meeting started with each participants introducing themselves, their affiliation and what value they see in holding this meeting. We then went into a discussion about the purpose of this group: Do we need to meet regularly? - Mandate? HL: European projects here with specific aims, that are complementary and/or overlapping What are current problems in each project that is relevant to others, how do we go about it, what's next? Role of networks is not clear yet, DEISA has a strong link already. Networks will become more important JK: Many people have several 'hats' - very common in EGI. Overlap of institutions, people on the projects.. Find convergence. Middleware, accounting, etc LM: understanding needed on roles BJ: What is our vision? How do they match - work on management level Community support already works together with DEISA (fusion) User communities have to drive this. LL: Mandate - recommendations by this group should also have influence on EC policies HD: We are here because someone else made a 'master plan' (layered e-Infrastructures) Understand interfaces - technology, identity (pma-policies) DK: every organization needs to fulfill its own obligations toward its users, and has to find the funding for it LL: we can all influence it. LM: maybe deliverables can be shared before the result is published - Composition? PK: The members of each research infrastructure are here: EGI, PRACE (in construction with the help of EGEE and DEISA), TERENA, DANTE How do they interact, who does what - how to exploit each others competence, synergies Documents available: EGI blueprint, soon also PRACE ecosystem analysis (after review this week) WG: Collaboration is needed between these infrastructures for the sake of our end-users - Other parties needed? No obvious candidates were identified - Scope? * European, do we want to keep it like that? * Having another meeting with US and Asian colleagues? Sharing Information. - Preparation of strategies, strategic documents should be done such that they are commented by relevant other parties - Structures, long term commitments of each project should be communicated to each other x sustainability x technical feasibility x usage models Form common opinions Further develop vision for future ecosystem Communicate with other similar structures HD: keep the scope in europe WG: it is too ambitious to talk to everyone HD: and we don't have a mandate LM: we would not even know whom to ask for one At this point Peter Kunszt had to leave the meeting to go to the airport. Based on the above discussion we identified the following objectives of this group: - Share information within the group on status/direction of our infrastructures - Gather input and form common opinion on subjects that will impact the long-term goals, function and effectiveness of the e-Infrastructure ecosystem - Present an agreed European position on e-Infrastructure to peer infrastructures elsewhere in the world - Further develop the vision and model for Europe's e-Infrastructure - Be able to offer a clear added-value to key user communities (e.g. future ESFRI RIs) where we know they will need networks/grids/supercomputers and help them devise computing models that would make use of the European e-Infrastructures - Interact with future structures (e.g. future internet, commercial cloud systems, green IT) to highlight the lessons learnt from existing production infrastructures and formulate common user requirements We also discussed how the networking models for PRACE and EGEE may differ and the relevance of the LHC network model for other ESFRI RIs (noting that some are more like sensor networks). At the firstmeeting we had considered PRACE sites as data sources and we should further build on this idea to define the ecosystem vision which can be documented and given to the ESFRI RIs as a potential model. This group should meet 3 to 4 times per year and each infrastruture/project will take turns in hosting the meeting, preferrably piggy-backing on some existing event to reduce additional travel. Telephone conference facilities should also be available so members that can join remotely. Membership of this group should be limited to the management representatives so that we can discuss openly and freely. It can cause joint-technical groups to work together to address specific issues which will advance the mandate/vision when driven by well identified user requirements. We also agreed that we will make more use of common dissemination channels for advertising the work of e-Infrastructures. An example given is the iSGTW weekly online magazine (http://www.isgtw.org/) which started with EGEE but is now supported by the GridTalk project. iSGWT has already carried articles about GEANT and DEISA applications and is willing to do more of this in the future. Similarly, we will co-locate an event for our infrastructures (similar to Catania where the Open Grid Forum meeting and the EGEE user-forum are co-located) in the 2010 timeframe. Based on these objectives, we prepared a set of actions to drive the agenda for the next meeting, to be hosted by DEISA/PRACE in Amsterdam on 11, 12, or 13 May. Actions: 1. Set-up doodle to schedule the exact date/time of the meeting in Amsterdam (Hermann) 2. Convert the above objectives into a mandate/vision statement to be finalised at the meeting and disseminated widely (Bob) 3. Each infrastructure will provide material as input to the next meeting about the contacts it has made with the ESFRI projects and the methods for interaction it has used. (EGEE/EGI/DEISA/PRACE/GEANT) Agenda for meeting in Amsterdam: - Finalise mandate and vision document to be disseminated widely - Pool input (provided before the meeting) from each infrastructure to build as complete a picture as possible about the e-Infrastructure needs of the ESFRI projects and the contacts already established. Analyse this information to establish a priority list for which ESFRI projects we should interact with. Consider if the tentative GEANT3 event in 2009 could be an opportunity to interact with some of the high-priority ESFRI projects. - schedule further 2009 meetings -
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Poster session Foyer
Foyer
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania-
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The Grid Observatory 5mConsidering its size, extensive coverage of scientific communities, the perspective of sustainable development, and numerous monitoring facilities, EGEE offers an unprecedented opportunity to observe, and gain understanding of, new computing practices of e-Science. The Grid Observatory (GO) collects, publishes and analyses data on the behaviour of EGEE. Its aim is to develop a scientific view of the dynamics of grid behaviour and usage, and to cross-fertilize with computer science.Speaker: Prof. Cecile Germain-Renaud (LRI)
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Simulation of the Oort formation cloud during the initial two Giga-years 5mThe study of the reservoirs of small bodies in the Solar-System can help us to refine the theory of the origin and evolution of the whole planetary system we live in. With our work, we attempt to contribute to the general endeavor of the researchers in the topic to work out a unified theory of the formation of all small-body reservoirs and, at the same time, the last stage of the jovian-planet formation. The model has been especially designed for grid computing.Speaker: Dr Giuseppe Leto (INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Catania, Italy)
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Results and Evaluation of ThIS on the Grid 5mThIS is a Therapeutic Irradiation Simulator for cancer therapy which is now being integrated into the OpenGATE project. It computes the 3D dose distribution resulting from an irradiation with carbon ion beams. The simulator has been ported on the EGEE Grid for computational speed-up. The porting methodology was presented at EGEE’08. We would now like to present current activity as well as an evaluation of the performances obtained due to the grid usage and the chosen porting method.Speaker: Mrs Sorina Camarasu Pop (CNRS - CREATIS LRMN)
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Grid Monitoring by Online Clustering 5mThe increase in grid resources and workload calls for scalable administration tools, paving the way toward autonomic grids [1-2]. A pre-requisite for an autonomic grid, namely modelling the complex interactions between the grid middleware and the e-scientist queries, is achieved via streaming the EGEE gLite operational data. These models, supported by the Grid Observatory clusters, are meant to provide on-line, multi-scale and meaningful descriptions of the EGEE status, facilitating its administration.Speaker: Ms Xiangliang Zhang (TAO (INRIA, CNRS, Univ. Paris-Sud 11))
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16:20
The EGEE user support infrastructure 5mGrid user support is a challenging task due to the distributed nature of the grid. The variety of users and Virtual Organisations adds further to the challenge. With the GGUS infrastructure, EGEE provides a portal where users can find support in their daily use of the grid. The current use of the system shows that this goal has been achieved with success. This year special care has been taken to incorporate additional support requirements that became relevant with the start-up of LHC in 2008.Speaker: Torsten Antoni (GGUS, KIT-SCC)
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SNGRID: an EGEE-environment for the SuperNEMO project 5mA GRID-environment has been developed by the SuperNEMO collaboration to find an optimal design for their detector. The SNGRID package allows users to test detector geometries in large-scale simulations on the EGEE infrastructure. In 2008 hundreds of geometries have been simulated to search for optimal size and design of tracking chambers, calorimeter, source, gamma veto. This input is used by the collaboration to drive through the R&D phase and final choices will be included in a TDR in 2009.Speaker: Dr Gianfranco Sciacca (University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom)
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Lightweight Java API and command-line interface for gLite 5mjLite is a Java library providing simple API for accessing a gLite based grid infrastructure. It is lightweight, easy to install and supports any Java-capable platform. The API provides functionality similar to gLite User Interface commands and can be used for development of grid-enabled Java applications, cross-platform tools, grid portals and services. A command-line interface based on jLite enables grid users to submit jobs directly from their desktop machines.Speaker: Dr Oleg Sukhoroslov (ISA RAS, Russia)
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Connecting helpdesks with webservices. South-West Europe helpdesk experience. 5mWe want to show the use of webservices as a main tool for a helpdesk syncronized with others, based on our experience to connect the EGEE South-West Federation (SW) helpdesk to GGUS.Speaker: Dr Gabriel Amoros (CSIC-IFIC)
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Grid enabled Neuro Imaging Analysis through the middleware agnostic Services 5mNeuro-imaging analysis is an important step in the research of neurological disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease. The neuGrid project [1] aims to Grid-enable neuro-imaging pipelines and facilitate analysis through a set of middleware agnostic services. In this paper, we present the neuro-imaging pipeline specification, workflow planning and enactment aspects of the project. We also detail application specific requirements and challenges in Grid-enabling the analysis process. In order to achieve this, we present services such as provenance and glueing which will help the users in carrying out their research.Speakers: Dr Ashiq Anjum (University of the West of England), Mr Irfan Habib (University of the West of England)
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A Grid fusion code for the Drift Kinetic Equation solver 5mNeoclassical transport for the TJ-II stellarator can be calculated by means of Drift Kinetic Equation (DKE) solvers. A computational version adapted to this stellarator was based on the work published by van Rij and Hirshman (Phys. Fluids B 1, 563 (1989)), the structure of which has been modified in order to be run and compiled in a Grid infrastructure in the framework of the EELA-2 project.Speakers: Mr ANTONIO JUAN RUBIO-MONTERO (CIEMAT), Mr MANUEL RODRIGUEZ (CIEMAT), Dr RAFAEL MAYO (CIEMAT)
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Extending SRM and SRB interoperation 5mPreviously we have presented the outcome of SRM and SRB interoperation (at the UF in Clermont-Ferrand) using gLite for file transfers. Building on this work, we now show how much (and how) this can be extended to cover the management of user metadata and tracking file replicas. While primarily focusing on SRM and SRB, we also take a look at iRODS (the successor to SRB) to evaluate whether the same tricks can be used to achieve interoperation.Speaker: Dr Jens Jensen (STFC-RAL)
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16:55
Design and Implementaion of WS-DAIR for AMGA 5mAMGA is a gLite-metadata catalogue designed to offer access to metadata for files stored on the Grid. WS-DAIR is the OGF standard for access to relational database on the Grid. Integration of WS-DAIR in AMGA allows a seamless integration of AMGA into the DAIS framework of OGF standardized Grid Data Access Services. We present the design and implementation of WS-DAIR for AMGA. We also present the results of performance study against the existing AMGA interfaces.Speaker: Mr sunil ahn (KISTI)
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Collaborative Tools for Virtual Organizations 5mVirtual Organizations use various tools to collaborate: web portals, mailing lists or chat servers. Each tool requires information about the members of the VO and how they are grouped together; this information is duplicated for each tool wasting effort and introducing inconstancies. We have developed a solution that allows an array of collaborative tools to use automatically the information stored in VOMS, simplifying the configuration and maximizing the collaboration within the VO.Speaker: Mr Daniel Jouvenot (NA4)
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Towards a Distributed CPU Usage Accounting Infrastructure 5mThe APEL (Accounting Processor for Event Logs) is a CPU usage accounting tool deployed within the EGEE and WLCG projects. APEL publishes accounting records into a centralised repository at a GOC (Grid Operations Centre) for access from a GUI web tool. A distributed accounting infrastructure is proposed based on modifications and extensions to the records transport mechanism of APEL to support a robust accounting capability at a NGI level and flexible across VOs accounting records queries.Speaker: Dr Ming Jiang (Science and Technology Facilities Council, United Kingdom)
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The gLite Workload Management System 5mThe gLite Workload Management System (WMS) represents a key entry point to the high-end services available on a Grid. The WMS is meant to provide reliable and efficient distribution and management of end-user requests. It has been designed and developed with some fundamental principles in mind: aiming at providing a dependable, responsive and reliable service as part of a Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).Speaker: Dr Marco Cecchi (INFN/CNAF)
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Seismic Risk Assessment Application Framework 5mSeismic Risk Assessment (SRA) is very important for public safety and hazards mitigation. It is also important for the correct determination of earthquake insurance premiums, and for understanding the social and psychological effects of earthquakes. The goal of this on-going study is to develop an application framework, with the acronym SRA, to allow embedding alternative (deterministic, probabilistic etc.) assessment models. This release aims to produce seismic hazard maps for the SEE region.Speaker: Dr Cevat Sener (Middle East Technical University)
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Analysis of User Behaviour in Grid 5mA large dataset of Grid log data was collected by Imperial College, London. It contains the summary of all jobs executed on EGEE Grid during the 20 months period. This dataset contains valuable information that can be used for modeling Grid. We here try to discover in it useful dependencies and typical scenarios using Data Mining and Machine Learning techniques. These results should lead to better understanding of behaviour of the users as well as the emerging behaviour of the network.Speaker: Mr Lovro Ilijasic (University of Eastern Piedmont)
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Virtualizing services in gLite: Increasing productivity without loosing performance 5mA full virtualized EGEE infrastructure has been implemented and our experiences during the migration process will be described. The new infrastructure allows us to easily start gLite services on demand. Extensive benchmarking has been done in our EGEE site showing similar performance between real machines and modern paravirtualized servers using Xen. In the case of hardware virtualized machines (HVM) the performance is degraded and they are currently not recommended. Results will be presented.Speaker: Mr Esteban Freire García (CESGA)
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An Environment for Solving Large Scale Optimization Problems on the Grid 5mThe paper presents the BNB-Grid environment for solving large scale optimization problems on the grid. The environment supports Branch-and-Bound and heuristic search strategies and runs on distributed systems consisting of different nodes ranging from PCs to large publicly available supercomputers. BNB-Grid efficiently copes with difficulties arising in such systems: the software diversity, unreliability of nodes and problems with batch (queuing) systems.Speaker: Mikhail Posypkin (ISA RAS)
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Multiplatform grid computation applied to an hyperbolic polynomial root problem 5mIn this work we present how we used the EGEE grid to perform computations on hyperbolic polynomials. Beyond their intrinsic interest in various fields of algebra and analysis, these polynomials have a remarkable importance in fields such as probability, physics and engineering. Additionally we performed this work using a job deploy mechanism which allows to execute computation on several platforms employing non-standard operating systems and hardware architectures.Speaker: Carlo Scio' (Enea)
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Optimal Routing Schemes for Sensor-Grid Architectures 5mThis paper describes an optimum sensor-grid architecture scheme which relies on a distributed hierarchical routing protocol taking into account design issues and challenges such as network connectivity, scalability, power management, as well as efficient QoS aware scheduling and availability. Resources used are distributed accordingly to the EGEE infrastructure.Speaker: Dr Dimitrios Vergados (University of Piraeus)
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NWChem package as promising grid application for nanodesign 5mThe NWChem package of quantum chemistry and molecular dynamics calculations was examined as a possible grid application in the frameworks of BalticGrid-II FP7 project. The realisation of hierarchical approach to nanosystems' simulation on the basis of NWChem is discussed. NWChem installation and benchmark testing results on various architectures are described. Job submission from g-lite environment is discussed. Preliminary results of carbon nanotubes array properties' calculations are presented.Speaker: Prof. Viatcheslav Barkaline (Belarussian National Technical University)
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New implementation of RTM access to LB data: status and migration plans 5mCurrent implementation of RTM access to LB data reaches its scalability limits, and it also exhibits several known problems. Recently we decided to address these issue by reimplementing the LB access module from scratch. We describe its design, introduce a working prototype, and discuss plans on smooth migration.Speaker: Dr Aleš Křenek (CESNET)
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Searching Software Resources in the Grid 5mWe investigate the problem of supporting keyword-based searching for the discovery of software resources that are installed on the nodes of large-scale, federated Grid computing infrastructures. We present Minersoft, a Grid harvester that visits Grid sites, crawls their file systems, identifies and classifies software resources, and discovers implicit associations between them using advanced IR techniques. Experiments were conducted using the EGEE infrastructure.Speaker: Mr Asterios Katsifodimos (University of Cyprus)
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Theoretical studies of Heavy ion collisions using the EGEE Grid infrastructure 5mThe knowledge of the properties of highly compressed and heated hadronic matter is an important issue for the understanding of astrophysical processes, such as the mechanism of supernovae explosions and the physics of neutron stars. Heavy Ion Collisions (HIC) provides the unique opportunity to explore highly excited hadronic matter under controlled conditions (high baryon energy densities and temperatures) in the laboratory.Speaker: Mrs Vaia Prassa (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
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A web interface to Job Submitting Tool (JST) 5mThe use of JST in the LIBI bioinformatics regional project has been strongly simplified with the adoption of a new web interface. Users can now launch by themselves their own applications on the Grid and require the grid expert support only in case of problems. The web interface exploits the features of the robot certificates: an occasional bioinformatics user is not required to hold a personal certificate in order to submit portals supported applications to the grid.Speaker: Guido Cuscela (INFN-Bari)
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User Level Monitoring Tool 5mMaking the grid closer to the user is of great importance for its broader acceptance. Most effort is put into the infrastructure itself, since it is a relatively new technology. While there are lots of tools to monitor the infrastructure, there are almost no tools that enable monitoring from the users point of view. We present one such tool, developed in the framework of the SEE-GDID-SCI project, hoping to help the users utilize the infrastructure to a greater extend.Speaker: Mr Anastas Misev (University Sts Cyril and Methodius, Faculty of Natural Sciences & Mathematics, Institute of Informatics, Skopje, MK)
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Enabling parallel Elmer for EGEE 5mElmer, the Finite Element software, has been installed and successfully used by ESR VO grid users for solving a number of multiphysical problems. Elmer is an open source simulation software developed and supported by CSC - the IT center for science (Finland). The recent parallel version installation of the software based on the Message Passing Interface makes solving large computational problems on the EGEE infrastructure possible.Speaker: Dr Ivan Degtyarenko (CSC - IT Center for Science)
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GRIDICOM - GRID ARCHIVE for DICOM images 5mNowadays, hospitals and medical structures produce a big amount of DICOM images for several kind of clinical exams (TAC, MR, PET, SPET, x-ray), and they usual store them into specific servers called PACS (Picture Archive and Communication System). However, the growth of digital health-records and medical images led to scalability and maintenance troubles. The GRIDICOM project aims at the realization of a Digital Archive for DICOM images that uses the Grid infrastructure as a Digital Repository.Speaker: Dr Salvatore Scifo (INFN)
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Workflow Management of the CAM Global Climate Model on the GRID 5mRecent trends in climate modeling find in GRID computing a powerful way to achieve results by sharing computing and data distributed resources. In this work, we present the successful port of an atmospheric Global Climate Model to the GRID by using existing middleware solutions plus newly developed tools (Grid Enabling Layer and Workflow Management Layer) to account for specific requirements posed by this application. In doing so, several weaknesses of current middleware were identified.Speaker: Mrs Valvanuz Fernandez (Universidad de Cantabria)
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Support for CREAM-based CEs in GridWay Metascheduler 5mThis work presents a new CREAM execution adapter that allows the execution of jobs to CREAM-based CEs via the GridWay metascheduler. Therefore, the user describes the jobs with GridWay Job Template and submits, controls and monitors them using GridWay commands. The design and implementation of CREAM adapter for GridWay metascheduler show the capabilities of GridWay to adapt job execution to several resource management services.Speaker: Dr Jose Herrera Sanz (Research)
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Multi-scale atmospheric composition modelling for the Balkan region 5mThe present work describes the progress in developing of an integrated, multi-scale Balkan region oriented modeling system. The main activities and achievements at this still preparatory stage of the work are: Creating, enriching and updating the necessary physiographic, emission and meteorological data bases; Installation of the models for GRID application, model tuning and validation; Extensive numerical simulations on regional (Balkan Peninsula) and local (Bulgaria) scales.Speakers: Prof. Dimiter Syrakov (National Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences), Dr Kostadin Ganev (Geophysical Institute, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences)
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How to use less known features of LB 5mLogging and Bookkeeping (L&B) is a gLite subsystem responsible for tracking jobs on the grid. Normally, users interact with it through gLite UI commands. This article presents other L&B usage patterns available with recent L&B versions, which are not widely known but are still useful (HTML or plain-text query interface, and notifications).Speaker: Aleš Křenek (CESNET z.s.p.o., Zikova 4, 160 00 Praha 6, Czech Republic)
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Executing virtual machines using gLite infrastructure. 5mIn the last two years the new concept of “Cloud Computing” is gaining importance and many users (both public researchers and private company) show interest in this technology in order to solve their computational problems. In this work it is shown how the EGEE/gLite production infrastructure can provide the computing resources necessary to establish a “Cloud Computing” environment. This is achieved by means of an ad-hoc developed software package and job submission wrapper.Speaker: Giacinto Donvito (INFN-Bari)
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18:50
Large-Scale Free Energy Calculations as Showcase of Worldwide Grid Usability 5mIn biochemical or chemical disciplines, the free energy forms a basis for the assessment of theoretical models towards experimental data. Unfortunately, its calculation is still a very time consuming task. Recently, we have implemented and tested the multiple walker approach, which significantly accelerates such kind of calculations, in a cluster environment. Since this approach requires only a small communication overhead, we would like to extend and test it in a grid environment.Speaker: Zora Strelcova (National Centre for Biomolecular Research, Masaryk University, Kotlarska 2, CZ-61137 Brno, Czech Republic)
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The step-by step computation of the energy flow and geo-massif fracture 5mThe energy flux is the key parameter of the geomechanics and seismic rays analysis. In the standard approach the continuum model of geophysics is linear with Euclidean metrics. This representation of the continuum is not accurate for the real deformed medium with intrinsic structural inhomogenity and defects collection. We consider the intrinsic metric of the deformed 4-continuum of geophysics, derived from the so-called Finsler space(FS).Speaker: Prof. Ihar Miklashevich (Belarusian National Technical University and Belarusian State University)
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Integrated Grid workflow for mesoscale climate modeling and visualization 5mThe integrated Grid workflow for mesoscale modeling and visualization contains four components: ActiveStorage, OGSA-DAI, MM5, NASA World Wind. For the MM5 model input and output we use a scalable parallel storage and data mining system called ActiveStorage. To make modeling results accessible on the Grid to Earth Science (ES) community, we used OGSA-DAI. To visualize data we have developed special plugin for NASA World Wind which can read and plot data directly from the OGSA-DAI resourcesSpeaker: Andrey Polyakov (Geophysical Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences (GC RAS),)
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EGI management board (CLOSED) Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania
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Cloud and Grid II: e-Infrastructures Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania-
09:00
Cloud Computing: The Dawn of a New (Computing) Era? 45m"Cloud Computing: The Dawn of a New (Computing) Era?" Benny Rochwerger, IBM/RESERVOIR Project Benny Rochwerger has a M.S. in Computer Science from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and a B.Sc. in Computer Engineering from the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. In his current position in IBM, he is the lead architect of RESERVOIR - a EU funded project investigating and developing technologies for the next generation infrastructure for services; previously he has worked in projects in virtualization management, autonomic computing, event processing, grid computing, distributed graphics and networking. As part of his work in grid computing he contributed to the definition of the Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA) specification. Before joining IBM, Mr. Rochwerger worked at Avaya, Data General, Legent Corporation and Fidelity Medical.Speaker: Dr Benny Rochwerger
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OGF: An opportunity to define e-Infrastructure for the masses based on experiences with EGEE 45m"OGF: An opportunity to define e-Infrastructure for the masses based on experiences with EGEE" Steven Newhouse, EGEE Technical Director, CERN Steven Newhouse was appointed Technical Director of the Enabling Grids for e-Science (EGEE) project in November 2008. Previously, he worked as a Program Manager in the High Performance Computing group in the Windows Server division at Microsoft. Based in Redmond, WA where he managed access to the Windows Compute Cluster Server product from non-Windows environments, primarily through the Open Grid Forum's (OGF) High Performance Computing Basic Profile (HPCBP) specification. He is a member of the OGF Standards Council where he is responsible for Application Standards and remains involved in several OGF working groups. Before starting at Microsoft in May 2007 he was Director of the Open Middleware Infrastructure Institute UK (OMII-UK), and on the management or supervisory boards of several major centres and projects within the UK e-Science programme. Previously, he was the Sun Lecturer in e-Science in the Department of Computing at Imperial College London and Technical Director of the London e-Science Centre (LeSC) also based at Imperial where he did his early research into the modeling of underwater acoustics using high performance computing resources.Speaker: Steven Newhouse
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Coffee 30m
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Computational Chemistry Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe increasing number of chemical computations applied to study properties of molecules, sets computational chemistry as a third EGEE Grid consumer, just after High Energy Physics and Life Science. Our applications cover a wide area ranging from quantum dynamics computations for small molecular systems through ab initio simulations up to molecular dynamics studies of huge molecular systems of biological and industrial importance.
The EGEE User Forum is a unique event as grid users and developers can meet together. The dedicated oral talks along with accompanying posters detail not only development and adoption of high levels tools and services easing execution of numerical experiments in chemistry and their planning, but also scientific results obtained with help of grid computing. Therefore the User Forum is a perfect opportunity to get an overview about current research activities among chemical community on EGEE Grid.
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COMPCHEM VO: molecular calculations on the EGEE grid platform 25mThe work carried out to implement complex computational chemistry suites of codes on the production EGEE Grid infrastructure available to the COMPCHEM VO is here presented and supported by some examples.Speaker: Dr Alessandro Costantini (COMPCHEM-University of Perugia)
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Grid Web Portal for Chemists 25mNew Grid users often face difficulties when using command line interfaces. This makes their adoption in the Grid environment much harder. To avoid users’ disappointment, anew web-based interface is proposed. In contrast to the existing web based tools the proposed portal will not only facilitate job management but primarily will serve as a work environment for chemists. Here, we present its current status with particular focus on a plug-in to the Gaussian computational chemistry package.Speaker: Dr Mariusz Sterzel (ACC Cyfronet AGH)
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11:50
Computational Chemistry with ECCE on EGEE grids 25mECCE is a graphical environment developed at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for defining molecular systems, submitting calculations to remote computers and storing results in a database for viewing and analysis. The purpose of this project is to extend this functionality of ECCE to European grids.Speaker: Olav Vahtras (Unknown-Unknown-Unknown)
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Earth Sciences Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaEarth Science (ES) is an all-embracing term for sciences related to planet Earth, covering a large and diverse user community, academy, European and international organisation as well as industry. The phenomena under study are dependent on geographical coordinates, altitude and time. This community has set up an active collaboration with teams on a worldwide basis and is accustomed to work in a distributed manner. In the past years the ES applications have shown an increasing need for access to intensive computing facilities and to large and heterogeneous sets of data. Besides the deployment of applications the community developed application specific grid- and web services.
The applications deployed on the EGEE infrastructure reflect the variety of scientific ES disciplines like atmospheric chemistry, climate, hydrology, meteorology pollution, solid earth physics and the different user communities like academia, European organisation, civil protection and industry. As shown, Grid provides more computing resources to the user and is also a way of sharing data, algorithm and of developing common tools. Even if EGEE is very suitable for intensive data processing and production, statistical approach, job on alert, simulation and modelling, the interface between ES environment and Grid middleware is not simple for many applications and developments. The 4th User Forum will give an excellent overview about the solutions implemented by the Earth Science community. The presentations will give a very interesting outline about the different research activities in Earth Science.
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Expanding the ES Grid community 20mThe ES community with its variety of disciplines has not yet adopted the Grid technology. Some reasons are the lack of awareness and knowledge about Grid, the perceived complexity of the Grid middleware and finally technical barriers related to data policies, different environments or access to data centres. To deal with this we provide examples of applications that already provided results while pointing out also their Grid requirements, and we explain the possible support by the ES Grid community.Speaker: Dr Monique Petitdidier (IPSL/CETP)
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EGEE and GENESI-DR: an interface for accessing and processing Earth Science data 20mData plays a key role in the earth science (ES) domain. ES data, services, results, and tools are accessible in a scattered and uncoordinated way. GENESI-DR is setting up a research infrastructure for discovering and accessing, via a user-friendly interface, ES data and services stored at different locations. Interfacing GENESI-DR with the EGEE middleware would allow scientists to exploit ES data on a large Grid infrastructure without storing and replicating the whole set of data on EGEE resource.Speaker: Roberto Cossu (European Space Agency)
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EGEODE usage overview in EGEE infrastructure 20mEGEODE is an initiative to create a VO dedicated to research in Geosciences for both industrial R&D and Academic Labs. This presentation will explain the main benefits of this Grid Computing emerging technology for geosciences. Then it will introduce EGEODE VO, give an overview of all applications already ported on the Grid infrastructure and running on this VO. It will detail the usage made by several laboratories and explain why it solve some of the problems they are usually facing.Speaker: Mr Gael Youinou (CGGVeritas)
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EnviroGRIDS - Gridifying the Black Sea catchment to support its sustainable development 20mThe Black Sea Catchment is recognized for its ecologically unsustainable development and inadequate resource management. The FP7-funded EnviroGRIDS project will address these issues by developing a Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) targeting this region and linked to the EGEE infrastructure. A large catalog of environmental data sets (e.g. landuse, hydrology, climate) will be gathered and used to perform distributed spatially-explicit simulations to build scenarios of key environmental changes.Speaker: Dr Nicolas Ray (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
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GLUE 2.0 Specification - Overview Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLUE 2.0 Specification - Overview (90 mins)
Sergio Andreozzi, Laurence Field, Balazs Kònya
(GLUE) Group DiscussionThe GLUE-WG aims to provide a recommendation for an abstract information model which is expressed via a schema independent of information system implementations. After two years of work, the specification document is mature.
The purpose of this session is to present and discuss the specification of GLUE 2.0.
Agenda:
- introduction
- main entities
- computing entities
- storage entitiesLocation: Caravaggio
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HPC Job Delegation Profile Working Session Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaHPC Job Delegation Profile Working Session (90 mins)
Alexander Papaspyrou, Philipp Wieder, and Ramin Yahyapour
(GSA-RG) Group DiscussionFollowing the work on the delegation of jobs between schedulers in HPC Computing Grid environments that started at OGF23, we continue to define a profile for this use case on the basis of established OGF standards towards a
"HPC Job Delegation Best Practices"
informational (GFD.I) document.
In this session, we discuss architectural issues and protocol profiles for the delegation of HPC jobs between schedulers from different domains.
Open issues in this context are
- the applicability of OGSA-RSS CSG to create a derivate for job offering in order to standardize the session generation mechanism
- the profiling of WS-Agreement for the delegation processA draft architecture has been defined during the last OGFs, which proposes a general protocol for delegating jobs on the basis of a session request/accept/commit/execute mechanism, using WS-Agreement, JSDL, and OGSA-BES/HPC-BP.
Agenda:
- Welcome and introduction
- What happened so far (work done since last OGF)
- OGSA-RSS CSG applicability for session creation/offering
- WS-Agreement templating draft
- Presentation on "MaGate: an interoperable decentralized grid scheduler prepared for standard-compliant job delegation" by Ye Huang (EIF)
- AOBLocation: Da Vinci
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High Energy Physics Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe High-Energy Physics (HEP) community is one of the pilot application domains in EGEE, and is the largest user of its grid infrastructure. By their nature HEP applications are very demanding and due to this fact these applications serve as a powerful role in understanding and improving EGEE delivered services. The HEP experiments also produce high-level middleware components than often become valuable prototypes for the overall grid community. The expertise developed by HEP users is open to the other EGEE grid users. This kind of applications are an important driving force within the EGEE project and promotes progress across many scientific disciplines.
The four Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments (ALICE, ATLAS, CMS and LHCb) at CERN will begin to record proton-proton events this year. The EGEE infrastructure will play a key role in the data processing and analysis of the 4 LHC experiment.The EGEE User Forums have been always a big opportunity to share the experiences between Grid users and also to trigger important collaboration between different clusters. The first session on Wednesday morning is devoted to the largest LHC experiments: ATLAS and CMS. Different talks will expose the status of the analysis frameworks, the sites and the monitoring tools of these experiments. Due to the importance of 2009 for the LHC, these talks will expose the current status of the largest experiments and their sites before the real data taking. This will be an ideal opportunity to share experiences with other communities which can see the results of the preparation phase of the LHC using the EGEE infrastructure. The second session will continue with another CMS contribution dedicated to the data analysis framework of the experiment. This second session will also include some fundamental examples of how the HEP cluster has contributed to other research fields with the toolkits created originally for this community but also extended to other applications within the EGEE framework.
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World-wide daily computing operations in ATLAS 20mThe ATLAS distributed computing activities involve about 200 computing centers distributed world wide and need people on shift covering 24 hours per day: data distribution, simulated event production, reprocessing and user analysis run continuously. In this paper we present the operations model followed by the ATLAS daily operations team, describe the main problems found (at the sites and experiment level), and describe the actions taken to increase the quality of service for the ATLAS community.Speaker: Mrs Schovancova Jaroslava (Institute of Physics, ASCR v.v.i. and CESNET)
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ATLAS Distributed Analysis tests in the Spanish Cloud 20mATLAS distributed analysis challenges need to be performed in order to validate site and cloud readiness for the full-scale user load. Breaking points and bottlenecks which result from the site/cloud design or configuration need to be identified.For that test,we are using a real analysis code from physicists,the Ganga LCG/EGEE backend,using its data-based brokering and splitting and both Posix I/O and copy mode for accessing to the data. A set of metrics and error classification will be providedSpeaker: Dr Santiago Gonzalez De La Hoz (IFIC-Valencia/CERN)
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Monitoring the ATLAS distributed production 20mThe importance of efficient monitoring tools for LHC experiments is emphasized by the fact that LHC will soon produce real data. We present the monitoring system of the ATLAS (CERN LHC experiment) distributed productionsystem. Collecting information in near real-time about the performance of each job execution, it shows to people on shift specific displays permitting them to quickly identify weak components and take the necessary actions.Speaker: Benjamin Gaidioz (CERN)
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The commissioning of CMS computing centres in the WLCG Grid 20mThe computing system of the CMS experiment works using distributed resources from EGEE, OSG and NorduGrid sites. The operation of the system requires a stable and reliable behaviour of the underlying infrastructure. This contribution describes in detail the procedure to test all relevant aspects of a Grid site and the capability to sustain the various CMS computing activities.Speaker: Dr Josep Flix Molina (CIEMAT)
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NSI working group Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaNSI working group 1 (90 mins)
Guy Roberts, Tomohiro Kudoh, Inder Monga
(NSI-WG) Group DiscussionNetwork Service Interface working group meeting
Agenda:
Deliverable 1: Use Case
This session will focus on reviewing the progress of deliverable -
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Novel Services and Technologies Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThere is a lot of interest in exploring the use of the emerging services, cloud provisioning models and virtualization technologies within Grid infrastructures. Cloud providers of elastic capacity could be used to scale-out a Grid site in order to meet fluctuating demands or to fast provision a virtualized Grid site. Virtualization technologies provide several benefits for Grid site maintenance, operation and use, such as reduction of gridification cycles, fault tolerance, easier middleware deployment, performance partitioning, easy support for different VOs. Finally, the optimization of typical Grid services would considerably improve the performance of the infrastructure.
The session agenda reflects topics on the integration of novel services and technologies into EGEE. The first talk shows how to achieve high availability of critical EGEE site services using virtualization. The aim of the second talk is to describe challenges raised in the deployment of a Grid site in the Cloud, addressing security and operational policies. Finally, the last talk describes the incorporation of caching mechanisms in DBII and its benefits in terms of bandwidth and performance.
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A new approach to High Availability 25mHigh availability has always been one of the main problems for a data center. Till now high availability was achieved by host per host redundancy, a highly expensive method in terms of hardware and human costs. A new approach to the problem can now be offered by virtualization. Using virtualization, it is possible to achieve a redundancy system for all the services running on a data center.Speaker: Dr Federico Calzolari (Scuola Normale Superiore - INFN Pisa)
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Operating a Grid Site in the Cloud 25mCloud technologies have matured quickly over the last couple of years and now provide an interesting platform on which to host grid services. The dynamic nature of these resources could ease life-cycle management for system administrators and could provide customized resources for users. However, questions remain about how these resources can meet the grid's security and operational policies. This presentation explains the challenges raised by using cloud resources for a EGEE grid site.Speaker: Dr Charles Loomis (CNRS/LAL)
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OGSA-DMI Update Session Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGSA-DMI Update Session (90 mins)
Mario Antonioletti
(OGSA-DMI-WG) PresentationThis session will outline a brief overview of OGSA-DMI and inform the community of what has been happening in this working group since the last OGF.
Agenda:
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Remote Instrumentation Services in Grid Environment - presentations Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaRemote Instrumentation Services in Grid Environment - presentations (90 mins)
Marcin Plociennik, Duane Edgington
(RISGE-RG) Group DiscussionThe RISGE-RG explores issues related to the exploitation of Grid technologies for conducting and monitoring measurement tasks and experiments on complex remote scientific equipment. The main purpose of this research group is to bring together various existing approaches in defining remote access interfaces to sophisticated laboratory equipment, as well as to come up with use cases that can dictate the requirements for integrating scientific instruments with the Grid.
During this session the main goals and current status of RISGE-RG will be presented, as well as next best practices.Agenda:
Draft of Agenda:- Introduction
- Best practice presentation TBC
- Next use cases and group discussion - TBD
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SAGA General Session Bernini (80) (CERN)
Bernini (80)
CERN
SAGA General Session (90 mins)
Andre Merzky, Shantenu Jha, Thilo Kielmann
(SAGA-WG) Group DiscussionGeneral discussion of SAGA core and extension specs
Agenda:- SAGA core errata (continued)
- SAGA bindings (focus: python)
- AOB
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e-Infrastructure Policy Group (Closed) Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
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Lunch 1h 30m
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Computational Chemistry Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe increasing number of chemical computations applied to study properties of molecules, sets computational chemistry as a third EGEE Grid consumer, just after High Energy Physics and Life Science. Our applications cover a wide area ranging from quantum dynamics computations for small molecular systems through ab initio simulations up to molecular dynamics studies of huge molecular systems of biological and industrial importance.
The EGEE User Forum is a unique event as grid users and developers can meet together. The dedicated oral talks along with accompanying posters detail not only development and adoption of high levels tools and services easing execution of numerical experiments in chemistry and their planning, but also scientific results obtained with help of grid computing. Therefore the User Forum is a perfect opportunity to get an overview about current research activities among chemical community on EGEE Grid.
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Grid computing applications in modeling and simulations of molecular nanomagnets and classical charged particles 25mPhysical properties of classical and quantum systems can be obtained using computer simulations, which is of importance in checking the suitability of the theoretical model and prediction of experimental results. We discuss the use of quantum transfer matrix (QTM) and exact diagonalization (ED) techniques for simulations of quantum systems and the use of the genetic-algorithm (GA) based approach for simulation of classical systems. These methods were exploited using the grid technology.Speakers: Prof. Grzegorz Kamieniarz (Faculty of Physics, A. Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland and European Institute of Molecular Magnetism, Florence, Italy), Mr Michal Antkowiak (Faculty of Physics, A. Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland and European Institute of Molecular Magnetism, Florence, Italy)
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Grid implemented quantum versus semiclassical evaluation of thermal rate coefficients 25mThe implementation on the grid of the programs MCTDH and SCIVR evaluating thermal rate coefficients using quantum and semiclassical approaches, respectively, can exploit concurrency at several levels. To this end the use of different models of distributions and of different types of coordinates can differently enhance the performances of the two approachesSpeaker: Prof. Antonio Lagana (Department of Chemistry, Universtiy of Perugia, Italy)
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Practical Experience from porting the Wien2k Application to EGEE 25mWien2k is a package for electronic structure calculation of crystals, used in computational chemistry. We have successfully ported this application to the EGEE infrastructure. In this talk we'll give an overview of this work, the lessons learned, and the outcome of the port.Speaker: Dr Maximilian Berger (University of Innsbruck)
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Data Area Meeting Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaData Area Meeting (90 mins)
David Martin, Erwin LaureStatus update and future priorities of the OGF Data Area
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EGEE Project Management Board (CLOSED) Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania -
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Earth Sciences Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaEarth Science (ES) is an all-embracing term for sciences related to planet Earth, covering a large and diverse user community, academy, European and international organisation as well as industry. The phenomena under study are dependent on geographical coordinates, altitude and time. This community has set up an active collaboration with teams on a worldwide basis and is accustomed to work in a distributed manner. In the past years the ES applications have shown an increasing need for access to intensive computing facilities and to large and heterogeneous sets of data. Besides the deployment of applications the community developed application specific grid- and web services.
The applications deployed on the EGEE infrastructure reflect the variety of scientific ES disciplines like atmospheric chemistry, climate, hydrology, meteorology pollution, solid earth physics and the different user communities like academia, European organisation, civil protection and industry. As shown, Grid provides more computing resources to the user and is also a way of sharing data, algorithm and of developing common tools. Even if EGEE is very suitable for intensive data processing and production, statistical approach, job on alert, simulation and modelling, the interface between ES environment and Grid middleware is not simple for many applications and developments. The 4th User Forum will give an excellent overview about the solutions implemented by the Earth Science community. The presentations will give a very interesting outline about the different research activities in Earth Science.
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Weather multi-model and multi-analysis ensemble forecasting on the Grid 20mA common problem in weather forecasting derives from the uncertainty related to the atmosphere’s chaotic behaviour. A well-known approach to deal with this is to base the final forecast not only on the predictions of one model (deterministic forecast) but on an ensemble of forecasts that is produced by running an individual model using a range of perturbed initial conditions (multi-analysis forecasting) or by running multiple models using the same initial conditions (multi-model forecasting).Speaker: Mr Evangelos Floros (GRNET)
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Carbon Dioxide Flux Data Computing and Data Grid Warehouses Using Grid Techniques 20mIn studies of climate change, utilizing the flux observation tower is one of the important research methods. In the FLUXNET, there are over 500 tower sites operating on a long-term and continuous basis in the world. Scientists face a challenge of dealing with a huge amount of data. The EGEE infrastructure is helpful for this research to provide abetter environment for huge sensor data management and a computation model with flexible user control. aAworkflow engine was integrated with gLite by the GAP.Speaker: Mr Cheng-Hsin Hsu (Academia Sinica Grid Computing)
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G-FireStation: Fire simulation from desktop to grid 20mCROSS-Fire is a research project, funded by the Portuguese NGI and led by UMinho, focused on topics related to decision making to control forest fires and on the porting to the grid of FireStation - a fire growth simulation application. G-FireStation exploits Grid capabilities in order to have a faster execution, to manage large data input/output files, to create a large data base of simulation results and to allow the interactive control of the simulations through a graphical user interfaceSpeaker: Prof. António Pina (Universidade do Minho)
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Enabling Numerical Modeling of Mantle Convection on the Grid 20mMantle convection is the driving force of plate tectonics. The Numerical Modeling of Mantle Convection (NMMC3D) application is focusing on the structure and dynamics of the mantle plumes. In collaboration with the MTA SZTAKI Application Porting Centre the application has been ported to the SEE-GRID-SCI infrastructure. The presentation introduces the steps that were taken to enable NMMC3D on gLite. The work has exploited the parameter study support tools of P-GRADE grid Portal.Speaker: Mr Miklos Kozlovszky (MTA SZTAKI)
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GLUE 2.0 Specification - Implementation Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLUE 2.0 Specification - Implementation (90 mins)
Sergio Andreozzi, Laurence Field, Balazs Kònya
(GLUE) PresentationThe GLUE-WG aims to provide a recommendation for an abstract information model which is expressed via a schema independent of information system implementations. After two years of work, the model is mature and several implementations are ongoing.
The purpose of this session is to present the implementations
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High Energy Physics Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe High-Energy Physics (HEP) community is one of the pilot application domains in EGEE, and is the largest user of its grid infrastructure. By their nature HEP applications are very demanding and due to this fact these applications serve as a powerful role in understanding and improving EGEE delivered services. The HEP experiments also produce high-level middleware components than often become valuable prototypes for the overall grid community. The expertise developed by HEP users is open to the other EGEE grid users. This kind of applications are an important driving force within the EGEE project and promotes progress across many scientific disciplines.
The four Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments (ALICE, ATLAS, CMS and LHCb) at CERN will begin to record proton-proton events this year. The EGEE infrastructure will play a key role in the data processing and analysis of the 4 LHC experiment.The EGEE User Forums have been always a big opportunity to share the experiences between Grid users and also to trigger important collaboration between different clusters. The first session on Wednesday morning is devoted to the largest LHC experiments: ATLAS and CMS. Different talks will expose the status of the analysis frameworks, the sites and the monitoring tools of these experiments. Due to the importance of 2009 for the LHC, these talks will expose the current status of the largest experiments and their sites before the real data taking. This will be an ideal opportunity to share experiences with other communities which can see the results of the preparation phase of the LHC using the EGEE infrastructure. The second session will continue with another CMS contribution dedicated to the data analysis framework of the experiment. This second session will also include some fundamental examples of how the HEP cluster has contributed to other research fields with the toolkits created originally for this community but also extended to other applications within the EGEE framework.
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Porting AITALC product through a master/worker scheme 20mA program calculating Bhabha scattering at High Energy Physics is considered for being ported into the EGEE infrastructure. The program, which is a result of the AITALC project, computes integrated cross sections and its first order quantum corrections for the electroweak Standard Model. The job submission, execution and monitoring are implemented through the GRIDWAY metascheduler.Speaker: Dr Alejandro Lorca (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
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CRAB: the CMS distributed analysis tool on EGEE/WLCG infrastructure 20mThe CERN's CMS experiment will produce 2.3 PetaBytes of data each year. CMS has defined a computing model based on the Grid infrastructure where the data will have to be distributed. CRAB is the tool designed and developed by CMS that facilitates the access and computation over the distributed data. It allows to distribute and parallelize the CMS data analysis processes over different Grid environments, as gLite and OSG, without any specific knowledge of the underlying Grid infrastructures.Speaker: Dr Federica Fanzago (CNAF Bologna and CERN)
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Lattice QCD 2008: large-scale usage of the Grid for theoretical physics 20mDuring the summer months of 2008 a large scale Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics (LQCD) simulation to study the properties of quark-gluon plasma was performed. The extent of LQCD analysis was equivalent to approximately 300 CPU years completed within 3 months (speedup ~1000) using the EGEE Grid resources. The LQCD analysis was implemented using Ganga (http://cern.ch/ganga) as the Grid job submission interface and DIANE (http://cern.ch/diane) as the job scheduler and optimizer.Speaker: Mr Jakub MOSCICKI (CERN)
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Medical Imaging Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaIn medical organizations, there is a growing demand for archiving, federating and analyzing medical image databases which are geographically distributed. The medical imaging sector covers all aspects related to computerized medical images analysis including medical images management, medical images post-processsing, medical images simulation and image-based therapy planning. The EGEE infrastructure helps addressing data distribution and compute intensive problems such as medical data stores federation, secure data access, large databases concurrent analysis, complex analysis procedures set up and imaging physics simulation.
This medical imaging session will report on current advances in medical data management, intensive image analysis pipelines and interface to medical organizations using the EGEE grid. The first talk addresses the problem of secured and structured medical reports management on the grid. Another talk provides insights on a middleware to interface existing neurosciences resources with the grid infrastructure. A third presentation is related to a data intensive cardiac sequences analysis pipeline enactment on the EGEE grid. Finally, a work on provisioning services for clinical support will be presented.
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Using AMGA to Store and Organise DICOM Structured Reports 20mThe medical imaging community uses DICOM to share and exchange data. Part of this standard is the DICOM Structured Report (DICOM-SR). DICOM-SR proposes a standard way to code and structure radiology reports. This work integrates DICOM-SR among multi-centre data storages to create knowledge repositories for research and training. DICOM-SR data are organised according to templates in AMGA. This catalog contains the links to full reports kept in backends along with the associated DICOM images.Speaker: Dr Ignacio Blanquer Espert (UPV-ITACA)
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Cardiac motion analysis pipeline support with the EGEE grid and MOTEUR 20mCardiovascular diseases are one of the major cause of mortality in industrialized countries. There is a thorough research effort to analyze and diagnose diseases of the heart from large volume temporal acquisitions of 3D images capturing the heart cycle. Diagnosis is assisted by the extraction of quantitative parameters such as ventricular Ejection Fraction (EF) measuring the accuracy of the cardiac beat and myocardial motion field giving insights on the proper heart function.Speaker: Dr Tristan Glatard (CREATIS / CNRS)
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A transitional middleware to support neurosciences on the EGEE grid 20mComputational neurosciences are brain image-based experimental sciences requiring the recruitment of large populations data sets and the set up of complex analysis pipelines. The grid provides a computing infrastructure adapted to face many computational neurosciences challenges. However, processing medical data in an open, wide scale environment creates new issues for the neurologists. In addition, existing environments have to be considered in a transitional environment towards HealthGrids.Speaker: Mr Alban Gaignard (I3S / CNRS)
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HOPE: HOspital Platform for E-health 20mNew opportunities offered by the EGEE infrastructure can be exploited to offer radiotherapists and medical physicists new telemedicine services and dosimetric calculations in order to improve their collaboration capabilities. The HOPE portal gives them an easy-to-use telemedicine environment to manage and share patient information between remote locations and the capability to use patient images in the Monte Carlo simulation platform GATE based on GEANT4 to produce precise treatment plans.Speaker: Dr Lydia Maigne (Laboratoire de Physique Corpusculaire CNRS/IN2P3)
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NSI working group Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaNSI working group 1 (90 mins)
Guy Roberts, Tomohiro Kudoh, Inder Monga
(NSI-WG) Group DiscussionNetwork Service Interface working group meeting
Agenda:
Deliverable 1: Use Case
This session will focus on reviewing the progress of deliverable -
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Remote Instrumentation Services in Grid Environment - use cases Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaRemote Instrumentation Services in Grid Environment - use cases (90 mins)
Marcin Płóciennik, Duane Edgington
(RISGE-RG) Group DiscussionThe RISGE-RG explores issues related to the exploitation of Grid technologies for conducting and monitoring measurement tasks and experiments on complex remote scientific equipment. The main purpose of this research group is to bring together various existing approaches in defining remote access interfaces to sophisticated laboratory equipment, as well as to come up with use cases that can dictate the requirements for integrating scientific instruments with the Grid.
This session is the continuation of the discussions and work started during previous RISGE-RG group sessions.
During this session the group will discuss and work on document with collected use cases, as well as about the "model use case". Presentation of new use cases are foreseen.Agenda:
Agenda:-
Status of the document with collection of use cases
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Work on the document
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TBC - presentation of next use case
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Resource Usage Service Core Specification Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaResource Usage Service Core Specification (90 mins)
Gilbert Netzer
(RUS-WG) Group DiscussionDiscussion of proposed RUS Core specification and further development of RUS specification suite.
Agenda:
- Presentation of proposed Co-Chair Shiraz Memon
- Discussion of current Core proposal
- Roadmap for further consolidation and specification development -
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SAGA Working Group Discussion Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaSAGA Working Group Discussion (90 mins)
Andre Merzky, Shantenu Jha, Thilo Kielmann
(SAGA-WG) Group DiscussionThe session will host a rather general Working Group discussion.
Agenda:
- status of SAGA implementations
- outreach work
- documentation work
- new usage areas (clouds, programming models -
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Coffee 30m
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4th Building Bridges in Healthgrids (BBH) Workshop – Scientific Workflows from Frontends to Multiple Enactment Environments and their Application to Biomedical Research Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania4th Building Bridges in Healthgrids (BBH) Workshop – Scientific Workflows from Frontends to Multiple Enactment Environments and their Application to Biomedical Research (1/2) (90 mins)
Giovanni Frisoni, Yannick Legré, Vincent Breton, David MansetThe aim of this 4th edition of our Workshop is to give an opportunity to all stakeholders to review the status of various International initiatives addressing the development of biomedical/scientific workflow enactment engines and workflow authoring environments, with a special emphasis on their application to Biomedical Research in general.
Thus, a panel of experts will be invited to give a short presentation of their work, related to biomedical research workflow authoring, verification, scheduling, execution and monitoring on Grid-based infrastructures.
The second part of the workshop will aim to engage discussions around related topics in the community, and in particular will attempt to address:
- Interoperability of workflow engines,
- Workflow authoring and related standards.
The session will start with a dedicated workshop of 90min welcoming presentations from experts in the field (experts selected from ongoing International projects). It will then be followed by a roundtable where panelists will provide insights on scientific/biomedical workflows, from their experience using given authoring tools, to their enactment on particular distributed infrastructures.
Agenda:
05' WORKSHOP
Welcoming and Introduction15' NeuroLOG Project
15' IAPA Project
15' Health-e-Child Project
15' neuGRID Project
15’ WISDOM Project
10’ Projects Q&A05' ROUNDTABLE
Welcoming and Introduction15' Panelists Introduction
70' Roundtable-
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The neuGRID project 30mSpeaker: Mr DAVID MANSET (MAAT GKnowledge)
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The e-NMR infrastructure 30mSpeaker: Dr Tsjerk Wassenaar (Utrecht University)
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Round table 1h 30mSpeakers: Prof. Carole Goble (Univ. Manchester), Mr DAVID MANSET (MAAT GKnowledge), Dr Diana Cresti (INFN), Mr Evangelos Floros (GRNET), Dr Ignacio Blanquer (UPV), Mr Jean Salzemann (IN2P3/CNRS), Silvia Olabarriaga (Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam), Mr Yannick Legré (MAAT G), tristan glatard (UVA)
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Advantages of regional e-Infrastructures in Grid technology uptake by local scientific communities and SMEs Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAdvantages of regional e-Infrastructures in Grid technology uptake by local scientific communities and SMEs (1/2) (90 mins)
Prof. Roberto Barbera (University of Catania and COMETA Consortium, Italy)The workshop, organized by the Italian GRISU Organisation, wants to focus on the advantages of regional Grid infrastructures in outreaching and supporting local scientific communities and Small & Medium Enterprises. The recent availability, in several EU countries, of e-Infrastructures having a true regional scope, has changed the perspective of scientific computing and data handling at a small geographical scale.
The “proximity” among end-users, infrastructure providers, Grid trainers and application supporters is becoming a key factor to attract new communities both from academia and industry and a key enabler of progress and sustainable development of some European Regions of Convergence. Some statistics collected in the last couple of years clearly demonstrate a strong correlation between the organization of dissemination events where current users showcase how they already took advantage of the regional e-Infrastructure (underlining how the adoption of the Grid paradigm has shortened their “time to scientific results” while decreasing their costs of ownership of the infrastructure) and the increase in the usage of/profit from these regional Grids.
Keynote speakers from France, Italy, and Spain will illustrate some “real-life” examples and show how the policies/standards adopted so far have attracted interest from industry. During the workshop, some uses cases will also be shown to demonstrate the success of the model of such regional e-Infrastructures. After the oral presentations, a general discussion on common policies, best practices, and future possibilities of collaboration will conclude the workshop -
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EGEE Project Management Board (CLOSED) Boccaccio (21)
Boccaccio (21)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Catania -
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Earth Sciences grid/cloud applications using OGC services Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaEarth Sciences grid/cloud applications using OGC services (90 mins)
Stefano Nativi, Luigi Fusco, Monique Petididier and Horst SchwichtenbergThe session will deal with Spatial Information Infrastructures (SII) based on the Grid/Cloud capacity in order to enable Earth Sciences applications and tools. The SII make use of the international OGC/ISO standards to implement interoperability. The infrastructures SOA aspects will be discusses as well as user experiences with multidisciplinary Earth Science applications
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Effective biodegradable polymers for Green IT Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 Cataniaeffective biodegradable polymers for Green IT (90 mins)
Session includes introduction of cost-effective, efficient polymers to be used for computer hardwares (viz. CDs, Cable, cover etc.)as a source of renewable energy for the best environmental friendly application of IT for the wellfare of all living beings.
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From Grid Monitoring to Analysis Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaFrom Grid Monitoring to Analysis (90 mins)
Cecile Germain-Renaud (EGEE Grid Observatory and LRI-CNRS) and Ramin Yahyapour (OGF AD Compute, CoreGRID Institute RMS, EC project SLA@SOI, German D-Grid)A major operational and scientific challenge is to progress towards a better understanding and sound optimization of the e-science and business infrastructures.
* Grid models are required for dimensioning, capacity planning, or optimizing applications.
* Self-regulation and self-maintenance are desired functionalities in many areas, ranging from resource allocation to real-time fault diagnosis, including green computing as an increasingly urgent constraint.
* Information on usage patterns based on VO provenance, differences in national Grid initiatives or on commercial production sites can help to improve management strategies.
* The exciting and new area of convergence between Grid and
Cloud Computing, including hosting scenarios in SOA environments requires to explore the similarities and discrepancies of e-science and business applications.Extensive grid monitoring facilities have already been developed, and
to some extent standardized or became de-facto standards. However, the availability of the resulting data is often very limited, hampering the investment of the scientific community into the abovementioned challenges.This joint session will contribute to fostering collaboration between data providers and potential users. The session will be an opportunity to:
* disseminate recent advances in grid monitoring, data publication, and exploration tools which are oriented towards the scientific view of grids;
* promote interoperability of the developing repositories of grid traces;
* show examples of experimental work on grid analysis and optimization.A major operational and scientific challenge is to progress towards a better understanding and sound optimization of the e-science and business infrastructures.
* Grid models are required for dimensioning, capacity planning, or optimizing applications.
* Self-regulation and self-maintenance are desired functionalities in many areas, ranging from resource allocation to real-time fault diagnosis, including green computing as an increasingly urgent constraint.
* Information on usage patterns based on VO provenance, differences in national Grid initiatives or on commercial production sites can help to improve management strategies.
* The exciting and new area of convergence between Grid and
Cloud Computing, including hosting scenarios in SOA environments requires to explore the similarities and discrepancies of e-science and business applications.Extensive grid monitoring facilities have already been developed, and
to some extent standardized or became de-facto standards. However, the availability of the resulting data is often very limited, hampering the investment of the scientific community into the abovementioned challenges.This joint session will contribute to fostering collaboration between data providers and potential users. The session will be an opportunity to:
* disseminate recent advances in grid monitoring, data publication, and exploration tools which are oriented towards the scientific view of grids;
* promote interoperability of the developing repositories of grid traces;
* show examples of experimental work on grid analysis and optimization.Agenda:
4 talks plus one short panel- 16:00
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Autonomic management of performance concerns in GCM 30mSpeaker: Prof. Marco Danelutto (University of Pisa)
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OGF Data Repositories Workshop Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF Data Repositories Workshop
Andreas Aschenbrenner, University of Goettingen, Tobias Blanke, King’s College London & DReSNET; Neil P Chue Hong, OMII-UK & OGF, Nicholas Ferguson, OGF.eeig & OGF Europe; David E Martin, IBM & OGFWith the emergence of the Knowledge-based economy, interoperability of digital repositories (DR) offers benefits not only for different types of users within the user community, but also eScience application developers. Through interoperability, e-Infrastructure providers can ensure the easy deployment and management of software distributions. eScience users have the freedom to choose services deployed in different infrastructures based on functionality with the potential to use a far greater amount of resources than is currently available to them. For eScience application developers on the other hand, interoperability ensures the portability of applications across multiple infrastructures to increase uptake.
Co-sponsored by OGF-Europe, OGF, DReSNET and OMII-UK, this will be the third in a series of workshops which focus on the Digital Repositories community. The previous two workshops at OGF23 and the 4th International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC) have focussed on identifying user community needs which can be addressed by the adoption of Grid & OGF standards. This workshop will look to see how the adoption of Distributed Computing and open standards can address these needs. The workshop will also look at how OGF can liaise with other standards bodies for the benefit of DRs. Focus will also be placed on the federation of Digital Repositories.
Agenda:
The agenda looks to focus on offering results from the Digital Repositories workshops at OGF23 and IDCC ’08, and the objectives of the OGF Data Working Groups by moving on to a more technical discussion of challenges facing the DR community. Presentations and a panel discussion will look at ways forward for the development of an OGF Digital Repositories Community.
Session 1
Overview of OGF work related to data repositories
Results of the DR workshops at OGF23 and IDCCSession 2
Panels discussion on Challenges in Data Repositories in a Grid Environment: Security, Authentication/Authorization, Data Formats, Data Management)
Standards and Best Practicies for Data Repositories
Working Group Proposals and ChartersPossible interventions from:
Andreas Aschenbrenner, University of Goettingen
Tobias Blanke, King’s College London
Antonio Calanducci, INFN, Catania (tbc)
Donatella Castelli, CNR-ISTI (tbc)
David DeRoure, University of Southampton (tbc)
David Flanders, Birkbeck University of London (tbc)
Lee Dirks, Microsoft Research (tbc)
David E Martin, IBM
Matt Zumwalt MediaShelf (tbc) -
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OGF-EU Community Outreach Seminar: Software development tools for distributed computing Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaSoftware development tools for distributed computing (1/2) (90 mins)
Rosa M. Badia (BSC), Andre Merzky (CCT LSU), Krzysztof Kurowski (PSNC)The rise of Virtualized and Distributed infrastructures and the emergence of multi-core processing capabilities have led to a new challenge to accomplish - the effective use of compute resources through the design and orchestration of distributed applications. This skill was once considered to preserve high performance and parallel computing, but the new high throughput computing infrastructures offer substantial capacity to support user needs for scalability and agility. As legacy, monolithic applications are replaced with service oriented applications, questions arise about the key steps to be taken in architecture and design to maximize the usefulness of the infrastructures and what lesson can be learned from industry leaders in the design of distributed applications. The workshop aims at bringing some clarity to the challenge of developing distributed applications, a clear understanding of the tools available to support the software designer and the collection of the best practices across European community.
The workshop proposed includes two sessions; each session introduces a topic emphasizing the adherence to standards and give practical examples of use also from industry to strengthen the relevance for a broad audience. The first session covers the DRMAA OGF standard from a use case driven point of view. It covers both, industrial and academic/research experience on using the submission and control of jobs Standard, providing an opportunity for academic and industry participants not only to get familiar with the standard, but also to actively join the session within a tutorial, to rise their awareness of creating good applications for submitting and controlling jobs in a distributed environment.
The workshop continues with a talk on the SAGA OGF standard; the aim is to discuss in particular the SAGA API as an effective way of developing distributed applications. The salient features of the API and several real examples of distributed applications and tools that have been developed using SAGA are going to be highlighted. The first session end with a description of the ETICS Test System. The ETICS System is an advanced build and test system designed to facilitate the management of complex distributed software in general and grid software in particular. The ETICS Multi-Node feature allows users to automate the deployment of tests spanning multiple nodes handling their communication and synchronization. The presentation describes how to exploit this feature to perform standard compliance and interoperability tests of distributed software. Some practical examples will be given based on our experience in testing different BES implementations.
The second session analyses the multicore and GPU programming; while for many years Graphics Processing Unit was only used to perform graphical operations, a new trend of using GPU for handling computation traditionally performed by CPU is arising. Similarly, new multicore processor devices had appeared in the recent years, becoming a revolution in the way computation have been done since now. Both approaches, multicore and GPUs, require right now additional effort from programmers. The session will cover trends in programming for these two new approaches to computation and show potential usage in distributed environments.
Agenda:
16:00-16:10 Welcome and Introduction - key objectives and expected outcomes, Chair of the Community Outreach Seminar16:10-17:30 Programming with DRMAA and SAGA Krzysztof Kurowski, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland; Andre Merzky, CCT, Louisana State University, USA
• Introduction and DRMAA overview, Krzysztof Kurowski, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland
• DRMAA - Experience from collaboration with Fedstage System, Pawel Lichocki, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland
• SAGA standards landscape (Thilo Kielmann)
• SAGA applications (Shantenu Jha)17:30-18:00 Validation of standard compliance and interoperability of grid software using the ETICS Test System, Lorenzo Dini, CERN
18:00-19:00 Multicore and GPU programming Rosa M. Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
• Multicore programming environments, CellSs and SMPSs, Rosa M. Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
• GPU programming with CUDA, Antonino Tumeo, Politecnico di MilanoLocation: Galilei
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OGF-Europe Tutorial: How to make sustainable a Grid-enabled e-Infrastructure Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-Europe Tutorial: standards for metadata (90 mins)
Donatella Castelli, George Kakaletris, Pasquale PaganoIn this OGF-Europe tutorial, the D4Science project will provide insights on a number of standards for metadata management in the area of digital repositories. Use cases and adoption will be also described
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Production Grid Infrastrucuture Profile Workshop Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaProduction Grid Infrastrucuture Profile Workshop (1/2) (90 mins)
Morris Riedel, David Wallom, Ballas KonyaThe Production Grid Infrastructure Profile Working Group (PGIP-WG) is a new working group within OGF that is based on the outputs of the Grid Interoperability Now Community Group. The main focus of the PGIP-WG is to define additions and clarifications of the current specifications within OGF and other standards organisations, defining new specifications where necessary, to meet the use cases emerging from the requirements of the production grid community.
This workshop will discuss the current state of the working group identifying the scenarios that are of particular interest to the group, identify weaknesses in the current specification set that makes them unsuitable in their current form for building production grid infrastructures, and showing the work that has been done to date in this working group and its future plans and timetable. Initial requirements in these areas will be discussed including the necessary extensions to existing standards, new standards and new community best practice documentation that is necessary.
The Production Grid Infrastructure Profile workshop will provide a location where the key worldwide production grid providers can discuss their standardisation requirements for the areas that will allow increased interoperability. This will include those outside the initial group that have started the effort from EGEE, ARC and UNICORE.
We have two sessions requested with the agenda as below.
Agenda:
-> Introduction (David)
-> The lessons learnt from GIN (Morris)
-> Key Scenarios with PGIP-WG (Ballas)
-> Discussion: Additional scenarios?
-> BREAK
-> The Standards Landscape for Production Grids (Morris)
-> Gaps in current standards from the production middleware perspective (??)
* gLite
* ARC
* Unicore
* ...
-> Current Status
-> Discussion: Next steps -
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Advantages of regional e-Infrastructures in Grid technology uptake by local scientific communities and SMEs Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAdvantages of regional e-Infrastructures in Grid technology uptake by local scientific communities and SMEs (1/2) (90 mins)
Prof. Roberto Barbera (University of Catania and COMETA Consortium, Italy)The workshop, organized by the Italian GRISU Organisation, wants to focus on the advantages of regional Grid infrastructures in outreaching and supporting local scientific communities and Small & Medium Enterprises. The recent availability, in several EU countries, of e-Infrastructures having a true regional scope, has changed the perspective of scientific computing and data handling at a small geographical scale.
The “proximity” among end-users, infrastructure providers, Grid trainers and application supporters is becoming a key factor to attract new communities both from academia and industry and a key enabler of progress and sustainable development of some European Regions of Convergence. Some statistics collected in the last couple of years clearly demonstrate a strong correlation between the organization of dissemination events where current users showcase how they already took advantage of the regional e-Infrastructure (underlining how the adoption of the Grid paradigm has shortened their “time to scientific results” while decreasing their costs of ownership of the infrastructure) and the increase in the usage of/profit from these regional Grids.
Keynote speakers from France, Italy, and Spain will illustrate some “real-life” examples and show how the policies/standards adopted so far have attracted interest from industry. During the workshop, some uses cases will also be shown to demonstrate the success of the model of such regional e-Infrastructures. After the oral presentations, a general discussion on common policies, best practices, and future possibilities of collaboration will conclude the workshop -
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Grid Computing & Geospatial Technologies Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGrid Computing & Geospatial Technologies (90 mins)
Christian Kiehle, Bastian BaranskiThis workshop is part of the ongoing collaboration of the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) and the OGF in the field of geospatial grid computing. It will cover case studies from the geospatial domain (e.g. disaster management, civil protection, geospatial modelling etc.) which significantly benefit from technologies related to grid infrastructures.
The workshop will focus on discussing how the paradigms of Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) and Geo Information Systems (GIS) can be integrated into grid middlewares or cloud computing infrastructures. It is expected that specialists from the field of SDI/GIS-Research and Development as well as specialists in the field of Grid-/Cloud-Computing will contribute reports on ongoing projects.
People involved in the current funding phase of the OWS-6 (OpenGIS Web Service Initiative) will give insight into the current state of standardization of geospatial webservices with special regards to grid computing.
The workshop offers a great opportunity to share ideas, discuss technical problems and explore future funding possibilities.
Organizations and individuals working in these areas, and all areas of geospatial data processing, interested in presenting their work, discussing their requirements, and pursuing joint efforts for running code and rough consensus, are encouraged to send an title and abstract to:
Dr. Christian Kiehle
lat/lon GmbH
kiehle@lat-lon.de
or
Bastian Baranski
University of Muenster, Institute for Geoinformatics
bastian.baranski@uni-muenster.de -
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Marketing Grid Service in the Cloud computing era Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMarketing Grid Service in the Cloud computing era (90 mins)
Santi Ristol (Atos Origin, Barcelona, Spain)In recent months the market has shifted away from the word Grid but the people and technology involved have not disappeared. Instead you find them hidden in the centre of a cloud, masquerading as virtualization or perhaps cowering under the umbrella term “enterprise solutions”. As recently exclaimed: “The Grid is dead, long live the Grid! (under the name of cloud)” . This session presents three speakers whose branding is tied to the word Grid and what they are doing to market their services in the non-Grid world.
Confirmed Speakers:Santi Ristol
(Atos Origin, Vice President, NESSI-Steering group, BEinGRID coordinator)Annalisa Bogliolo / Maria Tsakali (EC project officers for BEinGRID, BREIN, respectively)
Joan Masso (CEO Gridsystems)
Daniel Field (Business consultant, Atos Origin, Gridipedia)
• Welcome & introduction from the BEinGRID perspective – (Josep Martrat - Atos Origin Research and Innovation - josep.martrat@atosresearch.eu)
• GridSystems perspective - (Joan Massó - GridSystems - jmasso@gridsystems.com)
• EC perspective - (Maria Tsakali - EU - Maria.TSAKALI@ec.europa.eu)
• Gridipedia perspective - (Daniel Field - Atos Research and Innovation - daniel.field@atosresearch.eu)
• Final discussion (Chairman: Josep Martrat - Atos Origin Research and Innovation - josep.martrat@atosresearch.eu) -
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OGF Data Repositories Workshop Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF Data Repositories Workshop
Andreas Aschenbrenner, University of Goettingen, Tobias Blanke, King’s College London & DReSNET; Neil P Chue Hong, OMII-UK & OGF, Nicholas Ferguson, OGF.eeig & OGF Europe; David E Martin, IBM & OGFWith the emergence of the Knowledge-based economy, interoperability of digital repositories (DR) offers benefits not only for different types of users within the user community, but also eScience application developers. Through interoperability, e-Infrastructure providers can ensure the easy deployment and management of software distributions. eScience users have the freedom to choose services deployed in different infrastructures based on functionality with the potential to use a far greater amount of resources than is currently available to them. For eScience application developers on the other hand, interoperability ensures the portability of applications across multiple infrastructures to increase uptake.
Co-sponsored by OGF-Europe, OGF, DReSNET and OMII-UK, this will be the third in a series of workshops which focus on the Digital Repositories community. The previous two workshops at OGF23 and the 4th International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC) have focussed on identifying user community needs which can be addressed by the adoption of Grid & OGF standards. This workshop will look to see how the adoption of Distributed Computing and open standards can address these needs. The workshop will also look at how OGF can liaise with other standards bodies for the benefit of DRs. Focus will also be placed on the federation of Digital Repositories.
Agenda:
The agenda looks to focus on offering results from the Digital Repositories workshops at OGF23 and IDCC ’08, and the objectives of the OGF Data Working Groups by moving on to a more technical discussion of challenges facing the DR community. Presentations and a panel discussion will look at ways forward for the development of an OGF Digital Repositories Community.
Session 1
Overview of OGF work related to data repositories
Results of the DR workshops at OGF23 and IDCCSession 2
Panels discussion on Challenges in Data Repositories in a Grid Environment: Security, Authentication/Authorization, Data Formats, Data Management)
Standards and Best Practicies for Data Repositories
Working Group Proposals and ChartersPossible interventions from:
Andreas Aschenbrenner, University of Goettingen
Tobias Blanke, King’s College London
Antonio Calanducci, INFN, Catania (tbc)
Donatella Castelli, CNR-ISTI (tbc)
David DeRoure, University of Southampton (tbc)
David Flanders, Birkbeck University of London (tbc)
Lee Dirks, Microsoft Research (tbc)
David E Martin, IBM
Matt Zumwalt MediaShelf (tbc) -
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OGF-EU Community Outreach Seminar: Software development tools for distributed computing Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaSoftware development tools for distributed computing (1/2) (90 mins)
Rosa M. Badia (BSC), Andre Merzky (CCT LSU), Krzysztof Kurowski (PSNC)The rise of Virtualized and Distributed infrastructures and the emergence of multi-core processing capabilities have led to a new challenge to accomplish - the effective use of compute resources through the design and orchestration of distributed applications. This skill was once considered to preserve high performance and parallel computing, but the new high throughput computing infrastructures offer substantial capacity to support user needs for scalability and agility. As legacy, monolithic applications are replaced with service oriented applications, questions arise about the key steps to be taken in architecture and design to maximize the usefulness of the infrastructures and what lesson can be learned from industry leaders in the design of distributed applications. The workshop aims at bringing some clarity to the challenge of developing distributed applications, a clear understanding of the tools available to support the software designer and the collection of the best practices across European community.
The workshop proposed includes two sessions; each session introduces a topic emphasizing the adherence to standards and give practical examples of use also from industry to strengthen the relevance for a broad audience. The first session covers the DRMAA OGF standard from a use case driven point of view. It covers both, industrial and academic/research experience on using the submission and control of jobs Standard, providing an opportunity for academic and industry participants not only to get familiar with the standard, but also to actively join the session within a tutorial, to rise their awareness of creating good applications for submitting and controlling jobs in a distributed environment.
The workshop continues with a talk on the SAGA OGF standard; the aim is to discuss in particular the SAGA API as an effective way of developing distributed applications. The salient features of the API and several real examples of distributed applications and tools that have been developed using SAGA are going to be highlighted. The first session end with a description of the ETICS Test System. The ETICS System is an advanced build and test system designed to facilitate the management of complex distributed software in general and grid software in particular. The ETICS Multi-Node feature allows users to automate the deployment of tests spanning multiple nodes handling their communication and synchronization. The presentation describes how to exploit this feature to perform standard compliance and interoperability tests of distributed software. Some practical examples will be given based on our experience in testing different BES implementations.
The second session analyses the multicore and GPU programming; while for many years Graphics Processing Unit was only used to perform graphical operations, a new trend of using GPU for handling computation traditionally performed by CPU is arising. Similarly, new multicore processor devices had appeared in the recent years, becoming a revolution in the way computation have been done since now. Both approaches, multicore and GPUs, require right now additional effort from programmers. The session will cover trends in programming for these two new approaches to computation and show potential usage in distributed environments.
Agenda:
16:00-16:10 Welcome and Introduction - key objectives and expected outcomes, Chair of the Community Outreach Seminar16:10-17:30 Programming with DRMAA and SAGA Krzysztof Kurowski, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland; Andre Merzky, CCT, Louisana State University, USA
• Introduction and DRMAA overview, Krzysztof Kurowski, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland
• DRMAA - Experience from collaboration with Fedstage System, Pawel Lichocki, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland
• SAGA standards landscape (Thilo Kielmann)
• SAGA applications (Shantenu Jha)17:30-18:00 Validation of standard compliance and interoperability of grid software using the ETICS Test System, Lorenzo Dini, CERN
18:00-19:00 Multicore and GPU programming Rosa M. Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
• Multicore programming environments, CellSs and SMPSs, Rosa M. Badia, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
• GPU programming with CUDA, Antonino Tumeo, Politecnico di MilanoLocation: Galilei
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OGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions and Delivering the Potential of Energy Efficient Computing Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions (1/4) (90 mins)
Ian Osborne, Intellect; Juan Caceres, Telefonica; Melanie Biette and James Ahtes, Atos Origin; David Wallom, OeRC; Ignacio Llorente, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Laurent LeFevre, INRIA; Craig LeIn the age of climate change the concept of Green IT is becoming a hot topic within the ICT industry and society as a whole, as we seek to minimise our energy consumption for economic, legal, business strategic reasons and social corporate image to our customers and maximise the benefits accruing to the end users of our services. This is also an area of interest to the Policy Maker with discussions emerging of potential regulation of Data Centres, and a new Code of Conduct aimed at data centre owners in the European Union. What are the standards implications from this? What are the metrics/tools to measure the energy efficiency (e.g. Power Usage Effectiveness – PUE, Data Centre Efficiency - DCE)? How might we better orchestrate the use of shared infrastructure to reflect energy policy decisions (e.g. what equipment is to be used for what task, where and at what time?) and the distribution of workloads based on the energy requirements and the established policies. This session is aimed at bringing more light to the subject, following an introduction workshop at OGF 23 in Barcelona and the launch of the new Code of Conduct in November.
This session is intended to be a call to action to the community to work in key areas of contribution allowing us to:- a) design more efficient infrastructures with minimal carbon impact; b) operate the infrastructures in line with energy policies which allow the user to orchestrate the most efficient use of their energy resources; c) identify areas where standards can be developed to incorporate the necessary functionality. We intend illustrating the case for change by reference to recent moves in the regulatory environment in Europe, notably the EU Code of Conduct for Data Centres; as well as user case studies featuring advances in technologies which can assist in the efficient deployment of compute capability.
Agenda:
Our plan is to run a day long workshop (4*90 minute sessions) starting with a session reminding us of the context in which Green IT is meaningful and updating colleagues from around the world on progress made in their own communities. We will introduce expert speakers, describe the early “standards” work being done in governmental and industry agencies and have identified colleagues who can bring their own stories of Green IT in action in their own work environments as early case studies.
Speakers in the initial session include: Liam Newcombe, Romonet/BCS Data Centre Specialist Group – the architect of the EU Code of Conduct and developer of an engineering model for energy consumption in the data centre; and Paul Strong, Distinguished Scientist at e-Bay and OGF Board Member. We expect some user examples: Contributed by customers or collaborators of Atos Origin, Barcelona Supercomputing Centre and Telefonica.
Having framed the issue and identified the motivators and key stakeholders, we would then move on to working through the issue in more detail:-
We would like to consider some form of reference model for end to end energy management. Components may include:
• Monitoring (e.g. a sensor network)/Measuring
• Decision support tools (bringing the right advice to the environment)
• Enactment tools (e.g. Virtualisation, migration, rack power up/down)
We will need to work with an industry expert group to flesh these concepts out in order to bring the detail to the forum.
We would then close the workshop with a Call to action. Assuming that we have been successful in building the community and achieving a consensus on how to move forwards. -
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Production Grid Infrastrucuture Profile Workshop Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaProduction Grid Infrastrucuture Profile Workshop (1/2) (90 mins)
Morris Riedel, David Wallom, Ballas KonyaThe Production Grid Infrastructure Profile Working Group (PGIP-WG) is a new working group within OGF that is based on the outputs of the Grid Interoperability Now Community Group. The main focus of the PGIP-WG is to define additions and clarifications of the current specifications within OGF and other standards organisations, defining new specifications where necessary, to meet the use cases emerging from the requirements of the production grid community.
This workshop will discuss the current state of the working group identifying the scenarios that are of particular interest to the group, identify weaknesses in the current specification set that makes them unsuitable in their current form for building production grid infrastructures, and showing the work that has been done to date in this working group and its future plans and timetable. Initial requirements in these areas will be discussed including the necessary extensions to existing standards, new standards and new community best practice documentation that is necessary.
The Production Grid Infrastructure Profile workshop will provide a location where the key worldwide production grid providers can discuss their standardisation requirements for the areas that will allow increased interoperability. This will include those outside the initial group that have started the effort from EGEE, ARC and UNICORE.
We have two sessions requested with the agenda as below.
Agenda:
-> Introduction (David)
-> The lessons learnt from GIN (Morris)
-> Key Scenarios with PGIP-WG (Ballas)
-> Discussion: Additional scenarios?
-> BREAK
-> The Standards Landscape for Production Grids (Morris)
-> Gaps in current standards from the production middleware perspective (??)
* gLite
* ARC
* Unicore
* ...
-> Current Status
-> Discussion: Next steps -
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NETWORKING EVENT for all conference delegates Foyer
Foyer
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMingle and chat with your friends and colleagues at the end of a long day of sessions.
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Databases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDatabases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities. (1/3) (90 mins)
Dr. Roberto Barbera, Dr. Antonio Calanducci, Dr. Giuliano TaffoniThe use of databases (DB) in Grid infrastructures is increasing with time. In fact, new e-Science projects have a wide perception of the grid, and their applications require not only traditional computations, but also the use of complex data operations that require on-line and off-line access to pre-existing heterogeneous and independently operated DBs. DBMS are used both to handle data and metadata. Several scientific and industrial communities need e-infrastructures able to manage databases and metadata to develop and deploy their applications. Examples of those communities are: the Bioinformatics communities (see for example the BioinfoGRID project), the Astronomical communities (Virtual Observatory and Euro-VO projects), the Earth Science communities, the Climate Changes scientists (see for example the CMCC project whose Grid infrastructure is based on DBMS).
Some tools and services have been developed on this purpose: (i) the AMGA metadata catalogue, (ii) the Grid Data Source Engine (G-DSE), (iii) the Grid Relational Catalog (GRelC), (iv) the OGSA Data Access and Integration middleware (OGSA-DAI), (v) Spitfire, and (vi) Mobius project. Those tools have been addressing this important topic trying to provide a secure, transparent, robust, efficient and dynamic grid-enabled data access services for relational and non-relational data sources.Due to the success of the Database session at OGF23 we believe that it is important to re-propose this session at OGF25. This for the following important reasons:
• We plan to involve other EU-funded projects that were not present at OGF23 and need database access through grid for their data;
• We had a lot of requests to re-propose this workshop in future OGF
• New advances on DB access and metadata management through Grid environment. In particular we believe that is it important making developers and users from the different fields meet and exchange experiences and solutions.To achieve its goals, the workshop targets three main audiences:
• First the community of Grid DB access framework developers.
• Second the audience comprises the Grid users. This includes current and potential users in various scientific areas.
• People involved in the design and managing of scientific and industrial grid projects to help them to choose the right tool or infrastructure.Keynote speakers from France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, USA etc.
Agenda:
Tools:
AMGA project - http://amga.web.cern.ch/amga/
Grid DataSource Engine project -http://wwwas.oats.inaf.it/grid/G-DSE
GRelC - http://grelc.unile.it
OGSA-DAI – http://www.ogsadai.org.uk
MOBIUS - http://projectmobius.osu.edu/
SpitfireComparison evaluation of tools
The projects
EuroVO-AIDA - http://cds.u-strasbg.fr/twikiAIDA/bin/view/EuroVOAIDA/WebHome
D4SCIENCE - www.d4science.eu
METAFOR - http://metafor.enes.org
neuGRID - http://www.neugrid.eu/
NMDB - www.nmdb.info
GENESI - DR - www.genesi-dr.eu
LOFAR - http://www.lofar.org -
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From Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaFrom Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud (1/3) (90 mins)
Avner Algom, Wolfgang Gentzsch, Ignacio M. Llorente, and Martin WalkerCloud computing services, as offered by companies like Amazon, Google, IBM, Salesforce, Sun, and others, is on its way to become an important component of enterprise IT, adding a new, ‘external’ dimension of flexibility by enhancing one’s internal IT resource capacity when needed. The question still remains how suitable the Cloud services model will be for the capacity and capability computing demands of the HPC community, in research and industry.
While grids and virtualization provide the ‘plumbing’ to enable seamless access to distributed resources, clouds denote services on a pay-per-use basis. Grids stand out because of their flexible, dynamic, feature-rich resources and thus are complex by their very nature. Cloud applications will likely follow similar strategies as grid-enabling ones. Just as challenging, though, are the cultural, mental, legal, and political aspects of clouds. Building trust and reputation among the users and the providers will certainly help in many simple scenarios. But it is still a challenge to imagine users easily entrusting their corporate assets and sensitive data to cloud service providers.
This workshop will provide the Grid user community with solid information from renown experts in the field, about the innovative potential of the new Cloud technologies and services for their research and business. We will start with the different views of Cloud computing and the differences, benefits, and barriers compared to Grids. We continue presenting experiences and scenarios by organizations and projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures, and provide an overview of some relevant technological components to build Cloud services. Finally, we will look at challenges and future of Cloud computing, focusing on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. The workshop will close with a panel discussion.
SESSION 1: The Different Views of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Martin WalkerAIM: Presentation of positions by experts to share and discuss the different views of cloud computing and their novelty with respect to the current state of Grid computing. Presentations will focus on providing a clear definition of cloud computing, its real difference with Grid Computing and barriers for adoption. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what's the real difference between grid and cloud and why could this be important to me
· now that I have (invested in) a grid, why should I and how can I transform (part of) this into a cloud
· now that I (almost) understand the barriers to grid, where are the barriers of cloud computing and how can they be overcomeSPEAKERS, EXPERTS SUGGESTED: (4 20-minute presentations)
· Dennis Gannon (Indiana University): http://www.extreme.indiana.edu/~gannon/#Research
· Cal Loomis (CNRS and EGEE NA4 coordinator)/Marc Elian Bégin (Sixsq): Authors of EGEE Report “Clouds and grids - evolution or revolution?”
· Ian Foster or co-worker (University of Chicago): He has just organized a quite nice workshop on Cloud Computing and its Applications (http://www.cca08.org/)
· Andre Merzky, Shantenu Jha (Louisiana University), Geoffrey Fox (Indiana University): Authors of the OGF Report “Using Clouds to Provide Grids Higher-Levels of Abstraction and Explicit Support for Usage Modes”SESSION 2: Experiences about Grid Computing on Cloud
Coordinator: Wolfgang Gentzsch, DEISAAIM: Presentation/demonstration of experiences and scenarios by organizations/projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures. Presentation will describe both application and provision scenarios, focusing on the benefits obtained.
EXPERIENCES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Condor Pool on Clouds (Cycle Computing)
· The RESERVOIR Project: "The Reservoir Utility Computing Use Case". Presentation from Sun Microsystems. http://www.reservoir-fp7.eu/
· Grid-Ireland (They have evaluated the limitations of virtualization and cloud in production Grids, see http://www.terena.org/activities/nrens-n-grids/workshop-07/slides/3_virtualising_production.pdf)
· The Cumulus Project: Build a Scientific Cloud for a Data Center (University of Karlsruhe). They have early experiences of Cloud computing for data centers (www.cca08.org/speakers/wang.php)
· Cloud Computing for parallel Scientific HPC Applications (MIT). They have evaluated the feasibility of Running Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Climate Models on Amazon's EC2 (www.cca08.org/speakers/evangelinos.php)
· Mathias Dalheimer, Fraunhofer ITW Institute in Kaiserslautern, integrating EC2 services into the Fraunhofer PHASTGrid.
· Alatum from SCS in Singapore, which they say is a Grid but in fact it’s a Cloud: www.hpcwire.com/offthewire/Commercial_Grid_Alatum_Launched_in_Singapore.html
· Ewa Deelman, USC ISI, Clouds: An Opportunity for Scientific Applications, see slides at: http://www.cyfronet.pl/cgw08/programme.htmlSESSION 3: An Open-Source Technological Approach
Coordinator: Ignacio M. Llorente, Complutense University of MadridAIM: Presentation/demonstration of relevant technological components to build Cloud services by organization/projects to show the state of Cloud technology. Presentation should focus on the benefits and limitations of the technology and its position in the cloud ecosystem. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what are currently the most interesting (and important) open source software components to 'lego' a cloud.TECHNOLOGIES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Grid Gain – Java Gateway to Cloud Computing (Grid Gain)
· The OpenNebula VM Manager (www.OpenNebula.org/)
· Globus Nimbus (workspace.globus.org/)
· Eucalyptus (eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu/)
· Hadoop (hadoop.apache.org)
· NC State University Virtual Computing Lab: see http://www.virtualizationstrategies.com/category/cloud-computing
Key VCL people at NC State are Sam Averitt, Eric Sills, Mladen Vouk. Slides: http://vcl.ncsu.edu/sites/default/files/VCL-ICVCI052008.pdf
· Haizea, Ian Foster and Borja Sotomayor (haizea.cs.uchicago.edu)
· EnginFrame Cloud Portal (linked to Cloud technology like e.g. OpenNebula)SESSION 4: Challenges and Future of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Avner Algom, IGTAIM: Presentation of research and operation challenges by groups/projects. Presentation should focus on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· how can standards (and which ones) be useful to build a cloud, or connect my cluster/grid to a cloud.GROUPS/PROJECTS SUGGESTED: (2 – 3 15-minute presentations)
· Grid & Virtualization OGF WG (www.ogf.org/gf/group_info/view.php?group=gridvirt-wg)
· SLA@SOI European Project (www.sla-at-soi.eu)PANEL DISCUSSION (5-10-minute presentations + discussions)
· Benny Rochwerger (IBM Haifa): Challenges and Future of Cloud
· Avner giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloud Summit
· Martin giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloudscape Workshop
· Wolfgang, giving a brief summary on DEISA on its way to an HPC Cloud
· Ignacio giving a brief summary about the integration of cloud-like technologies into future e-infrastructures
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GLIF Workshop Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLIF Workshop (1/5) (90 mins)
Erik-Jan Bos (SURFnet) & Gigi Karmous-Edwards (MCNC)Workshop on automating the connection of lightpaths for data-intensive scientific research.
The Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF) is a global virtual organisation that promotes lambda networking, and involves (National) Research and Education Networks, consortia and institutions who agree to share their lambda resources for use in data-intensive scientific research.This workshop will focus on the ongoing activities to design and implement an international lambdagrid infrastructure, and to provide relevant functions and services should be provided. This includes the identification and documentation of best practices, the development of a database of technical resources that combine scheduling mechanisms, investigating automation of control plane mechanisms, and helping define control plane architectures for Grids
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Life Sciences Data integration - Semantic and Syntactic Interoperabilities Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaData integration in life sciences (90 mins)
D. Angulo C. Blanchet V. Breton A. Farazdel F. Konishi, J. MontagnatThis session fits into the joint life sciences and eHealth tracks at OGF25.
Following the roundtable on interoperability in life sciences wednesday from 5.30PM to 7PM, this session will focus on data integration.Three presentations are scheduled:
- Andrew Lyall (EBI) will present the ELIXIR project which aims at setting up a distributed infrastructure for biological information in Europe
- Jean Salzemann(CNRS) will present the challenges related to semantic and synthactic interoperabilities and the solutions explored within the EMBRACE project
- David Manset (MAAT France) will describe how semantic and synthactic interoperabilities have been addressed in the Health-e-Child projectThe talks will be followed by a discussion
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Towards semantic and synthactic interoperabilities in life sciences: the case of EMBRACE 25mSpeaker: Mr Jean Salzemann (IN2P3/CNRS)
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ELIXIR, a distributed infrastructure for biological information in Europe 25mSpeaker: Vincent Jacques Breton (Laboratoire de Physique Corpusculaire (LPC))
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Interoperability issues on biomedical regional projects 15mSpeaker: Roberto Barbera (UNIV. CATANIA AND INFN)
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Museum Digitalization and Protection of Cultural Heritage Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMuseum Digitalization and Protection of Cultural Heritage (90 mins)
The session is divided into four parts.The frist is focus on the digitalzation of Cultural heritage;the second part is about the significance of museum digitalization to the protection of cultural heritage;the third part is mainly on the construction of museum digitalzation about the cultural heritage and the last part about the reference of museum digitalization of the Chinese cultural heritage protection
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OGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions and Delivering the Potential of Energy Efficient Computing Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions (1/4) (90 mins)
Ian Osborne, Intellect; Juan Caceres, Telefonica; Melanie Biette and James Ahtes, Atos Origin; David Wallom, OeRC; Ignacio Llorente, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Laurent LeFevre, INRIA; Craig LeIn the age of climate change the concept of Green IT is becoming a hot topic within the ICT industry and society as a whole, as we seek to minimise our energy consumption for economic, legal, business strategic reasons and social corporate image to our customers and maximise the benefits accruing to the end users of our services. This is also an area of interest to the Policy Maker with discussions emerging of potential regulation of Data Centres, and a new Code of Conduct aimed at data centre owners in the European Union. What are the standards implications from this? What are the metrics/tools to measure the energy efficiency (e.g. Power Usage Effectiveness – PUE, Data Centre Efficiency - DCE)? How might we better orchestrate the use of shared infrastructure to reflect energy policy decisions (e.g. what equipment is to be used for what task, where and at what time?) and the distribution of workloads based on the energy requirements and the established policies. This session is aimed at bringing more light to the subject, following an introduction workshop at OGF 23 in Barcelona and the launch of the new Code of Conduct in November.
This session is intended to be a call to action to the community to work in key areas of contribution allowing us to:- a) design more efficient infrastructures with minimal carbon impact; b) operate the infrastructures in line with energy policies which allow the user to orchestrate the most efficient use of their energy resources; c) identify areas where standards can be developed to incorporate the necessary functionality. We intend illustrating the case for change by reference to recent moves in the regulatory environment in Europe, notably the EU Code of Conduct for Data Centres; as well as user case studies featuring advances in technologies which can assist in the efficient deployment of compute capability.
Agenda:
Our plan is to run a day long workshop (4*90 minute sessions) starting with a session reminding us of the context in which Green IT is meaningful and updating colleagues from around the world on progress made in their own communities. We will introduce expert speakers, describe the early “standards” work being done in governmental and industry agencies and have identified colleagues who can bring their own stories of Green IT in action in their own work environments as early case studies.
Speakers in the initial session include: Liam Newcombe, Romonet/BCS Data Centre Specialist Group – the architect of the EU Code of Conduct and developer of an engineering model for energy consumption in the data centre; and Paul Strong, Distinguished Scientist at e-Bay and OGF Board Member. We expect some user examples: Contributed by customers or collaborators of Atos Origin, Barcelona Supercomputing Centre and Telefonica.
Having framed the issue and identified the motivators and key stakeholders, we would then move on to working through the issue in more detail:-
We would like to consider some form of reference model for end to end energy management. Components may include:
• Monitoring (e.g. a sensor network)/Measuring
• Decision support tools (bringing the right advice to the environment)
• Enactment tools (e.g. Virtualisation, migration, rack power up/down)
We will need to work with an industry expert group to flesh these concepts out in order to bring the detail to the forum.
We would then close the workshop with a Call to action. Assuming that we have been successful in building the community and achieving a consensus on how to move forwards. -
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The Role of gLite in a Commercial Setting - Now & In the Future! Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe Workshop has the dual purpose of evaluating the current adoption status of gLite in a business context, analysing its strengths and weaknesses and identifying future potential in a commercial setting and business oriented standards, as well as deliberating the recommendations from the 6th EC Concertation Meeting (Distributed computing Track) on industry perspectives in current & future e-infrastructures, thus building on discussions initiated during the EGEE'08 Business Track.
Expected Workshop Outputs: a gLite SWOT analysis, along with a Rapporteur of the main points raised and examples of current and potential future adoption in diverse commercial sectors serving as the basis for the EGEE Commercial Exploitation Plan.- 09:00
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Constellation Technologies – Providing cloud computing services to industry 10mConstellation, a spin out from STFC’s Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, is providing cloud computing services to all sectors of industry. It uses technology originally developed under the EGEE programme managed out of CERN and which now runs the WLCG (World LHC Computing Grid). This talk will cover the various business model options for the technology and as well as showing a worked example of a commercial service.Speaker: Nick Trigg (Constellation Technologies)
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Business applications: The COMETA Approach 10mBusiness Grid promises the wide adoption of economic valuable Grid services. Lot of effort is being spent by the research community as well as by companies that are interested in its adoption. The business component involves more stringent requirements in terms of security, confidentiality, trust, guarantees etc. Moreover, by its nature a business process requires most of the times interactions with other business processes and therefore the Business Grid has to provide service composition. Also, regulations of B2B and B2C interactions have to be performed through SLAs which need a management system that deals with those contracts. Researchers are now focusing on those business aspects, trying to address some of the new arising challenges namely business models, pricing models and market economies. Also, some of the current Grid middlewares (Globus, Gria, Unicore, gLite) are including some of the mentioned aspects within their solutions. This talk presents the strategy of the COMETA consortium in setting up a Grid-based business infrastructure to provide business services with guaranteed QoS for SME companies through a starting Grid infrastructure, provided by the Pi2S2 project, where a business layer on top of this Grid infrastructure has been created in order to provide business services with guaranteed quality. Being service demand in most cases unpredictable, the ability to scale the system with it can be a winning factor for SME companies, which normally have limited budget to spend compared to large enterprises. It will also cover how this fits into other current market offerings and outline out how other middlewares are dealing with the aspects such as business models, pricing models and market economies.Speaker: Prof. Antonio Puliafito (University of Messina)
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New industry perspectives emerging from the EGI model 10mAs we are approaching the 10th anniversary of the European eScience production grid, a major change is occurring to its operational model that could improve the effectiveness of industry collaborations. The European Grid Initiative (EGI), designed to succeed to the EGEE series of projects, is built on top of new actors (Egi.org, NGIs, Consortia, SSCs, …), each with a well defined role, in a more stable framework that could ease the identification of complementary commercial roles and trigger new grid computing business models. With EGI, we will be entering in a more mature phase, with the positive side-effect of new opportunities for the smarter commercial players. A positive industry-research linkage could boost grid computing diffusion and improve the usability in a true advantage for the European user communities. More: in the same way as GSM introduced a new social proximity to all European people, EGI could strengthen the links between experts, advanced enterprises and research institutions with the effects of a large European “knowledge accelerator” boosting innovation.Speaker: Antonio Candiello (INFN)
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The industrial sustainability of gLite - QosCosGrid & EGEE facilitating industry use cases / a proposal for discussion 10mQosCosGrid is a research project providing Grid solutions for parallel and complex-systems workload. At EGEE-08 Istanbul, we have been presenting a concept how QosCosGrid capabilities can be used to enhance gLite / EGEE capabilities and reachout by adding new types of user groups and workload types. That’s great but not enough to work with industry and commerce! Observing the markets closely, we believe there is growing demand for “real Grid solutions in industry. But how to follow up on industry and commercial use cases - production=non-research usage - given the regulatory restrictions of academic environments? QosCosGrid is tackling that problem by founding a charitable association, guaranteeing the sustenance of the technological solution and bridging between academic technology and industry usage. Although surely starting with QosCosGrid technology, the charitable association is planned open to include and embrace more technologies and foster and facilitate their usage in academia and industry. How about facilitating joint gLite/QosCosGrid deployments for industry? This is an invitation – at least for discussion!Speaker: Bernhard Schott (Platform)
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Panel Discussion 30m
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Coffee 30m
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Databases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDatabases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities. (1/3) (90 mins)
Dr. Roberto Barbera, Dr. Antonio Calanducci, Dr. Giuliano TaffoniThe use of databases (DB) in Grid infrastructures is increasing with time. In fact, new e-Science projects have a wide perception of the grid, and their applications require not only traditional computations, but also the use of complex data operations that require on-line and off-line access to pre-existing heterogeneous and independently operated DBs. DBMS are used both to handle data and metadata. Several scientific and industrial communities need e-infrastructures able to manage databases and metadata to develop and deploy their applications. Examples of those communities are: the Bioinformatics communities (see for example the BioinfoGRID project), the Astronomical communities (Virtual Observatory and Euro-VO projects), the Earth Science communities, the Climate Changes scientists (see for example the CMCC project whose Grid infrastructure is based on DBMS).
Some tools and services have been developed on this purpose: (i) the AMGA metadata catalogue, (ii) the Grid Data Source Engine (G-DSE), (iii) the Grid Relational Catalog (GRelC), (iv) the OGSA Data Access and Integration middleware (OGSA-DAI), (v) Spitfire, and (vi) Mobius project. Those tools have been addressing this important topic trying to provide a secure, transparent, robust, efficient and dynamic grid-enabled data access services for relational and non-relational data sources.Due to the success of the Database session at OGF23 we believe that it is important to re-propose this session at OGF25. This for the following important reasons:
• We plan to involve other EU-funded projects that were not present at OGF23 and need database access through grid for their data;
• We had a lot of requests to re-propose this workshop in future OGF
• New advances on DB access and metadata management through Grid environment. In particular we believe that is it important making developers and users from the different fields meet and exchange experiences and solutions.To achieve its goals, the workshop targets three main audiences:
• First the community of Grid DB access framework developers.
• Second the audience comprises the Grid users. This includes current and potential users in various scientific areas.
• People involved in the design and managing of scientific and industrial grid projects to help them to choose the right tool or infrastructure.Keynote speakers from France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, USA etc.
Agenda:
Tools:
AMGA project - http://amga.web.cern.ch/amga/
Grid DataSource Engine project -http://wwwas.oats.inaf.it/grid/G-DSE
GRelC - http://grelc.unile.it
OGSA-DAI – http://www.ogsadai.org.uk
MOBIUS - http://projectmobius.osu.edu/
SpitfireComparison evaluation of tools
The projects
EuroVO-AIDA - http://cds.u-strasbg.fr/twikiAIDA/bin/view/EuroVOAIDA/WebHome
D4SCIENCE - www.d4science.eu
METAFOR - http://metafor.enes.org
neuGRID - http://www.neugrid.eu/
NMDB - www.nmdb.info
GENESI - DR - www.genesi-dr.eu
LOFAR - http://www.lofar.org -
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Evolvement of US and European HPC Infrastructures Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaEvolvement of US and European HPC Infrastructures (90 mins)
Hermann Lederer, DEISA, Thomas Eickermann, PRACE, and Phil Andrews, TeraGridThis Session, will start with an actual overview of the DEISA, PRACE, and TeraGrid initiatives, including joint technologies and standards used, their evolving collaboration described, and a joint vision about the future HPC/Grid/Cloud infrastructures for e-Science exhibited.
Over the last 30 years, a few tens of powerful HPC centres have been built and operated in Europe and the US and successfully helped to advance computational sciences and the whole science community. During the last five years, two EU FP6/FP7 funded projects have been established to unite some of the most powerful supercomputing centres into one European HPC ecosystem. Recently, cooperations started between the European initiatives with the US TeraGrid.The DEISA Consortium has deployed and operated the Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications. In DEISA-2, the consortium continues to support and further develop the distributed high performance computing infrastructure and its services. Activities, services, and standards relevant for Applications Enabling, Operation, and Technologies are continued and further enhanced. Grand challenge projects are performed on a regular basis within the DEISA Extreme Computing Initiative (DECI). By selecting the most appropriate supercomputer architectures for each project, DEISA is opening up the currently most powerful HPC architectures available in Europe for the most challenging projects.
The Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe (PRACE) prepares the creation of a persistent pan-European HPC service, providing European researchers with access to capability computers and forming the top level of the European HPC ecosystem. The service will comprise three to five superior tier-0 HPC centres strengthened by regional and national supercomputing centres working in tight collaboration through grid technologies. PRACE is preparing for the implementation of this infrastructure in 2009/2010 by defining and setting up the legal and organisational structure involving HPC centres, national funding agencies, and scientific user communities. It is procuring a set of prototypes to prepare for the deployment of the first Petaflop/s production systems including selection, evaluation, benchmarking and scaling of middleware, libraries and applications.
The TeraGrid is the amalgamation of the major U.S. National Science Foundation HPC centers, currently with approximately a dozen Resource Provider sites and a total computational capacity of over 1 Petaflop. This is scheduled to increase to about 2 PF in 2009 and 3 PF in 2010. The TeraGrid itself will experience a major transformation in 2010, with
a new organizational model expected to replace the current approach. This reorganization is presently in the proposal stage. We will discuss the history of the TeraGrid, the past changes in the funding and strategic plans, and any available information on future directions, including technology, standards, and international collaboration.In this session, special attention will be given to the importance and use of standards for building and operating complex HPC e-Infrastructures, and their important role in disseminating and further developing these standards will be described.
Agenda:
- Introduction, overview, and vision for
HPC ecosystems for e-science at continental
scale
- The DEISA project, presence and future
- The PRACE project, presence and future
- The TeraGrid project, presence and future
- Moderated Q&A and discussions about
success and challenges of standards,
international collaboration, and next
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From Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaFrom Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud (1/3) (90 mins)
Avner Algom, Wolfgang Gentzsch, Ignacio M. Llorente, and Martin WalkerCloud computing services, as offered by companies like Amazon, Google, IBM, Salesforce, Sun, and others, is on its way to become an important component of enterprise IT, adding a new, ‘external’ dimension of flexibility by enhancing one’s internal IT resource capacity when needed. The question still remains how suitable the Cloud services model will be for the capacity and capability computing demands of the HPC community, in research and industry.
While grids and virtualization provide the ‘plumbing’ to enable seamless access to distributed resources, clouds denote services on a pay-per-use basis. Grids stand out because of their flexible, dynamic, feature-rich resources and thus are complex by their very nature. Cloud applications will likely follow similar strategies as grid-enabling ones. Just as challenging, though, are the cultural, mental, legal, and political aspects of clouds. Building trust and reputation among the users and the providers will certainly help in many simple scenarios. But it is still a challenge to imagine users easily entrusting their corporate assets and sensitive data to cloud service providers.
This workshop will provide the Grid user community with solid information from renown experts in the field, about the innovative potential of the new Cloud technologies and services for their research and business. We will start with the different views of Cloud computing and the differences, benefits, and barriers compared to Grids. We continue presenting experiences and scenarios by organizations and projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures, and provide an overview of some relevant technological components to build Cloud services. Finally, we will look at challenges and future of Cloud computing, focusing on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. The workshop will close with a panel discussion.
SESSION 1: The Different Views of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Martin WalkerAIM: Presentation of positions by experts to share and discuss the different views of cloud computing and their novelty with respect to the current state of Grid computing. Presentations will focus on providing a clear definition of cloud computing, its real difference with Grid Computing and barriers for adoption. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what's the real difference between grid and cloud and why could this be important to me
· now that I have (invested in) a grid, why should I and how can I transform (part of) this into a cloud
· now that I (almost) understand the barriers to grid, where are the barriers of cloud computing and how can they be overcomeSPEAKERS, EXPERTS SUGGESTED: (4 20-minute presentations)
· Dennis Gannon (Indiana University): http://www.extreme.indiana.edu/~gannon/#Research
· Cal Loomis (CNRS and EGEE NA4 coordinator)/Marc Elian Bégin (Sixsq): Authors of EGEE Report “Clouds and grids - evolution or revolution?”
· Ian Foster or co-worker (University of Chicago): He has just organized a quite nice workshop on Cloud Computing and its Applications (http://www.cca08.org/)
· Andre Merzky, Shantenu Jha (Louisiana University), Geoffrey Fox (Indiana University): Authors of the OGF Report “Using Clouds to Provide Grids Higher-Levels of Abstraction and Explicit Support for Usage Modes”SESSION 2: Experiences about Grid Computing on Cloud
Coordinator: Wolfgang Gentzsch, DEISAAIM: Presentation/demonstration of experiences and scenarios by organizations/projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures. Presentation will describe both application and provision scenarios, focusing on the benefits obtained.
EXPERIENCES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Condor Pool on Clouds (Cycle Computing)
· The RESERVOIR Project: "The Reservoir Utility Computing Use Case". Presentation from Sun Microsystems. http://www.reservoir-fp7.eu/
· Grid-Ireland (They have evaluated the limitations of virtualization and cloud in production Grids, see http://www.terena.org/activities/nrens-n-grids/workshop-07/slides/3_virtualising_production.pdf)
· The Cumulus Project: Build a Scientific Cloud for a Data Center (University of Karlsruhe). They have early experiences of Cloud computing for data centers (www.cca08.org/speakers/wang.php)
· Cloud Computing for parallel Scientific HPC Applications (MIT). They have evaluated the feasibility of Running Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Climate Models on Amazon's EC2 (www.cca08.org/speakers/evangelinos.php)
· Mathias Dalheimer, Fraunhofer ITW Institute in Kaiserslautern, integrating EC2 services into the Fraunhofer PHASTGrid.
· Alatum from SCS in Singapore, which they say is a Grid but in fact it’s a Cloud: www.hpcwire.com/offthewire/Commercial_Grid_Alatum_Launched_in_Singapore.html
· Ewa Deelman, USC ISI, Clouds: An Opportunity for Scientific Applications, see slides at: http://www.cyfronet.pl/cgw08/programme.htmlSESSION 3: An Open-Source Technological Approach
Coordinator: Ignacio M. Llorente, Complutense University of MadridAIM: Presentation/demonstration of relevant technological components to build Cloud services by organization/projects to show the state of Cloud technology. Presentation should focus on the benefits and limitations of the technology and its position in the cloud ecosystem. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what are currently the most interesting (and important) open source software components to 'lego' a cloud.TECHNOLOGIES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Grid Gain – Java Gateway to Cloud Computing (Grid Gain)
· The OpenNebula VM Manager (www.OpenNebula.org/)
· Globus Nimbus (workspace.globus.org/)
· Eucalyptus (eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu/)
· Hadoop (hadoop.apache.org)
· NC State University Virtual Computing Lab: see http://www.virtualizationstrategies.com/category/cloud-computing
Key VCL people at NC State are Sam Averitt, Eric Sills, Mladen Vouk. Slides: http://vcl.ncsu.edu/sites/default/files/VCL-ICVCI052008.pdf
· Haizea, Ian Foster and Borja Sotomayor (haizea.cs.uchicago.edu)
· EnginFrame Cloud Portal (linked to Cloud technology like e.g. OpenNebula)SESSION 4: Challenges and Future of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Avner Algom, IGTAIM: Presentation of research and operation challenges by groups/projects. Presentation should focus on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· how can standards (and which ones) be useful to build a cloud, or connect my cluster/grid to a cloud.GROUPS/PROJECTS SUGGESTED: (2 – 3 15-minute presentations)
· Grid & Virtualization OGF WG (www.ogf.org/gf/group_info/view.php?group=gridvirt-wg)
· SLA@SOI European Project (www.sla-at-soi.eu)PANEL DISCUSSION (5-10-minute presentations + discussions)
· Benny Rochwerger (IBM Haifa): Challenges and Future of Cloud
· Avner giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloud Summit
· Martin giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloudscape Workshop
· Wolfgang, giving a brief summary on DEISA on its way to an HPC Cloud
· Ignacio giving a brief summary about the integration of cloud-like technologies into future e-infrastructures
· All, summarizing their respective Session -
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GLIF Workshop Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLIF Workshop (1/5) (90 mins)
Erik-Jan Bos (SURFnet) & Gigi Karmous-Edwards (MCNC)Workshop on automating the connection of lightpaths for data-intensive scientific research.
The Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF) is a global virtual organisation that promotes lambda networking, and involves (National) Research and Education Networks, consortia and institutions who agree to share their lambda resources for use in data-intensive scientific research.This workshop will focus on the ongoing activities to design and implement an international lambdagrid infrastructure, and to provide relevant functions and services should be provided. This includes the identification and documentation of best practices, the development of a database of technical resources that combine scheduling mechanisms, investigating automation of control plane mechanisms, and helping define control plane architectures for Grids
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Interconnecting Desktop and Service Grids - Impact on applications and the role of standards Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaInterconnecting Desktop and Service Grids - Impact on applications and the role of standards (1/2) (90 mins)
Peter Kacsuk and Vangelis FlorosThe proposed sessions will be organised jointly by EDGeS and EGEE. EDGeS is a European FP7 project with the goal of integrating service grids with various desktop grids. The selected service grid to produce a production EDGeS infrastructure is EGEE and the selected desktop grids are BOINC and XtremWeb. The current EDGeS infrastructure integrates the EDGeS VO of EGEE with the following desktop grids:
- SZTAKI desktop grid (public BOINC DG)
- Extremadura desktop grid (public BOINC DG)
- Univ. Westminster desktop grid (private BOINC DG)
- Correlation Systems Ltd. desktop grid (private BOINC DG)
- CNRS IN2P3 desktop grid (public and private XtremWeb DGs)
- AlmereGrid (public XtremWeb DG)
The primary goal of this session is to show for the EGEE users how the EDGeS technology can support their applications with an increased size of production grid system that contains computing resources from home PCs, school PCs, university PCs and town citizens' PCs. The session will also provide a large set of application porting case studies to show how EGEE applications and DG applications can be ported to EDGeS. Standards play a significant role in bridging the two worlds of Desktop and Service Grids. The session will also give the opportunity to present standards important for such Grid interoperation, their current status, potential gaps and discuss them with related OGF WGs.Note that although the selected service grid is EGEE and the selected desktop grids are BOINC and XtremWeb, EDGeS considers the standardization of integrating other type of service and desktop grids in the future and hence the session could be useful to users of other types of grids like GT4, Unicore, etc.
The session will consist of two subsessions with the following goals:
Subsession 1 will introduce the EDGeS project and explains the bridging technology that was developed in EDGeS in order to integrate EGEE with BOINC and XtremWeb based desktop grids and the grid standards used to achieve this. This subsession will also explain the structure and usage of the production EDGeS infrastructure that integrates the EDGeS VO of EGEE with several desktop grids. The relationship between GIN (OGF) standards and EDGeS will also be highlighted by Erwin Laure. Finally, a presentation will be given on the application porting technology that was developed in EDGeS in order to migrate existing EGEE and desktop grid applications into EDGeS and also to develop new applications for EDGeS.
Subsession 2 will introduce and describe those applications that are either already ported into EDGeS or under porting. These applications originally were either DG or EGEE applications. The presentations will show in detail how DG and EGEE applications were actually ported into EDGeS. The applications will cover a wide range of possible application fields showing that there is a large number of potential applications than can take advantage of the EDGeS infrastructure. This large selection of potential applications will help the EGEE users to decide if porting their current applications to EDGeS is feasible. The presentations are also planned to show that the actual migration of applications from EGEE to EDGeS is quite straightforward.
At the end of subsession-2 a discussion forum enables the audience to ask questions and discuss issues with the EDGeS experts and with the session speakers.
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Introduction to EDGeS 15mSpeaker: Prof. Peter Kacsuk (MTA SZTAKI)
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Bridge technologies to integrate EGEE with BOINC 15mSpeaker: Dr Robert Lovas (MTA SZTAKI)
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Bridge technologies to integrate EGEE with XtremWeb 15mSpeaker: G. Fedak (INRIA)
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Open Standards Facilitating Grid Interoperability 15mSpeaker: Erwin Laure (KTH (Royal Institute of Technology))
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Application porting technologies to develop applications for EDGeS 15mSpeaker: Tamas Kiss (University of Westminster)
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AlmereGrid and EDGeS 15mSpeaker: A. Emmen (AlmereGrid)
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OGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions and Delivering the Potential of Energy Efficient Computing Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions (1/4) (90 mins)
Ian Osborne, Intellect; Juan Caceres, Telefonica; Melanie Biette and James Ahtes, Atos Origin; David Wallom, OeRC; Ignacio Llorente, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Laurent LeFevre, INRIA; Craig LeIn the age of climate change the concept of Green IT is becoming a hot topic within the ICT industry and society as a whole, as we seek to minimise our energy consumption for economic, legal, business strategic reasons and social corporate image to our customers and maximise the benefits accruing to the end users of our services. This is also an area of interest to the Policy Maker with discussions emerging of potential regulation of Data Centres, and a new Code of Conduct aimed at data centre owners in the European Union. What are the standards implications from this? What are the metrics/tools to measure the energy efficiency (e.g. Power Usage Effectiveness – PUE, Data Centre Efficiency - DCE)? How might we better orchestrate the use of shared infrastructure to reflect energy policy decisions (e.g. what equipment is to be used for what task, where and at what time?) and the distribution of workloads based on the energy requirements and the established policies. This session is aimed at bringing more light to the subject, following an introduction workshop at OGF 23 in Barcelona and the launch of the new Code of Conduct in November.
This session is intended to be a call to action to the community to work in key areas of contribution allowing us to:- a) design more efficient infrastructures with minimal carbon impact; b) operate the infrastructures in line with energy policies which allow the user to orchestrate the most efficient use of their energy resources; c) identify areas where standards can be developed to incorporate the necessary functionality. We intend illustrating the case for change by reference to recent moves in the regulatory environment in Europe, notably the EU Code of Conduct for Data Centres; as well as user case studies featuring advances in technologies which can assist in the efficient deployment of compute capability.
Agenda:
Our plan is to run a day long workshop (4*90 minute sessions) starting with a session reminding us of the context in which Green IT is meaningful and updating colleagues from around the world on progress made in their own communities. We will introduce expert speakers, describe the early “standards” work being done in governmental and industry agencies and have identified colleagues who can bring their own stories of Green IT in action in their own work environments as early case studies.
Speakers in the initial session include: Liam Newcombe, Romonet/BCS Data Centre Specialist Group – the architect of the EU Code of Conduct and developer of an engineering model for energy consumption in the data centre; and Paul Strong, Distinguished Scientist at e-Bay and OGF Board Member. We expect some user examples: Contributed by customers or collaborators of Atos Origin, Barcelona Supercomputing Centre and Telefonica.
Having framed the issue and identified the motivators and key stakeholders, we would then move on to working through the issue in more detail:-
We would like to consider some form of reference model for end to end energy management. Components may include:
• Monitoring (e.g. a sensor network)/Measuring
• Decision support tools (bringing the right advice to the environment)
• Enactment tools (e.g. Virtualisation, migration, rack power up/down)
We will need to work with an industry expert group to flesh these concepts out in order to bring the detail to the forum.
We would then close the workshop with a Call to action. Assuming that we have been successful in building the community and achieving a consensus on how to move forwards. -
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caGrid 1.3 - Focus on semantics and scalability Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniacaGrid 1.3 - Focus on semantics and scalability (45 mins)
The session will describe the upgrades made to the caGrid (https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/workspaces/Architecture/caGrid/) infrastructure, especially in the area of semantic queries and improved scalability.
The presentation will go over the key upgrades made in the following core components of caGrid:1) Semantic model and using semantics to peform queries over disparate services
2) Performance improvements thru development new components, including Grid transfer
3) Workflow integration , thru description of efforts to integrate caGrid into Taverna Workbench.
4) New exciting work on WSRF.NET integration.
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Lunch 1h 30m
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Databases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDatabases and metadata on the Grid: tools and communities. (1/3) (90 mins)
Dr. Roberto Barbera, Dr. Antonio Calanducci, Dr. Giuliano TaffoniThe use of databases (DB) in Grid infrastructures is increasing with time. In fact, new e-Science projects have a wide perception of the grid, and their applications require not only traditional computations, but also the use of complex data operations that require on-line and off-line access to pre-existing heterogeneous and independently operated DBs. DBMS are used both to handle data and metadata. Several scientific and industrial communities need e-infrastructures able to manage databases and metadata to develop and deploy their applications. Examples of those communities are: the Bioinformatics communities (see for example the BioinfoGRID project), the Astronomical communities (Virtual Observatory and Euro-VO projects), the Earth Science communities, the Climate Changes scientists (see for example the CMCC project whose Grid infrastructure is based on DBMS).
Some tools and services have been developed on this purpose: (i) the AMGA metadata catalogue, (ii) the Grid Data Source Engine (G-DSE), (iii) the Grid Relational Catalog (GRelC), (iv) the OGSA Data Access and Integration middleware (OGSA-DAI), (v) Spitfire, and (vi) Mobius project. Those tools have been addressing this important topic trying to provide a secure, transparent, robust, efficient and dynamic grid-enabled data access services for relational and non-relational data sources.Due to the success of the Database session at OGF23 we believe that it is important to re-propose this session at OGF25. This for the following important reasons:
• We plan to involve other EU-funded projects that were not present at OGF23 and need database access through grid for their data;
• We had a lot of requests to re-propose this workshop in future OGF
• New advances on DB access and metadata management through Grid environment. In particular we believe that is it important making developers and users from the different fields meet and exchange experiences and solutions.To achieve its goals, the workshop targets three main audiences:
• First the community of Grid DB access framework developers.
• Second the audience comprises the Grid users. This includes current and potential users in various scientific areas.
• People involved in the design and managing of scientific and industrial grid projects to help them to choose the right tool or infrastructure.Keynote speakers from France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, USA etc.
Agenda:
Tools:
AMGA project - http://amga.web.cern.ch/amga/
Grid DataSource Engine project -http://wwwas.oats.inaf.it/grid/G-DSE
GRelC - http://grelc.unile.it
OGSA-DAI – http://www.ogsadai.org.uk
MOBIUS - http://projectmobius.osu.edu/
SpitfireComparison evaluation of tools
The projects
EuroVO-AIDA - http://cds.u-strasbg.fr/twikiAIDA/bin/view/EuroVOAIDA/WebHome
D4SCIENCE - www.d4science.eu
METAFOR - http://metafor.enes.org
neuGRID - http://www.neugrid.eu/
NMDB - www.nmdb.info
GENESI - DR - www.genesi-dr.eu
LOFAR - http://www.lofar.org -
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From Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaFrom Grids to Clouds, a workshop for Grid users facing the Cloud (1/3) (90 mins)
Avner Algom, Wolfgang Gentzsch, Ignacio M. Llorente, and Martin WalkerCloud computing services, as offered by companies like Amazon, Google, IBM, Salesforce, Sun, and others, is on its way to become an important component of enterprise IT, adding a new, ‘external’ dimension of flexibility by enhancing one’s internal IT resource capacity when needed. The question still remains how suitable the Cloud services model will be for the capacity and capability computing demands of the HPC community, in research and industry.
While grids and virtualization provide the ‘plumbing’ to enable seamless access to distributed resources, clouds denote services on a pay-per-use basis. Grids stand out because of their flexible, dynamic, feature-rich resources and thus are complex by their very nature. Cloud applications will likely follow similar strategies as grid-enabling ones. Just as challenging, though, are the cultural, mental, legal, and political aspects of clouds. Building trust and reputation among the users and the providers will certainly help in many simple scenarios. But it is still a challenge to imagine users easily entrusting their corporate assets and sensitive data to cloud service providers.
This workshop will provide the Grid user community with solid information from renown experts in the field, about the innovative potential of the new Cloud technologies and services for their research and business. We will start with the different views of Cloud computing and the differences, benefits, and barriers compared to Grids. We continue presenting experiences and scenarios by organizations and projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures, and provide an overview of some relevant technological components to build Cloud services. Finally, we will look at challenges and future of Cloud computing, focusing on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. The workshop will close with a panel discussion.
SESSION 1: The Different Views of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Martin WalkerAIM: Presentation of positions by experts to share and discuss the different views of cloud computing and their novelty with respect to the current state of Grid computing. Presentations will focus on providing a clear definition of cloud computing, its real difference with Grid Computing and barriers for adoption. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what's the real difference between grid and cloud and why could this be important to me
· now that I have (invested in) a grid, why should I and how can I transform (part of) this into a cloud
· now that I (almost) understand the barriers to grid, where are the barriers of cloud computing and how can they be overcomeSPEAKERS, EXPERTS SUGGESTED: (4 20-minute presentations)
· Dennis Gannon (Indiana University): http://www.extreme.indiana.edu/~gannon/#Research
· Cal Loomis (CNRS and EGEE NA4 coordinator)/Marc Elian Bégin (Sixsq): Authors of EGEE Report “Clouds and grids - evolution or revolution?”
· Ian Foster or co-worker (University of Chicago): He has just organized a quite nice workshop on Cloud Computing and its Applications (http://www.cca08.org/)
· Andre Merzky, Shantenu Jha (Louisiana University), Geoffrey Fox (Indiana University): Authors of the OGF Report “Using Clouds to Provide Grids Higher-Levels of Abstraction and Explicit Support for Usage Modes”SESSION 2: Experiences about Grid Computing on Cloud
Coordinator: Wolfgang Gentzsch, DEISAAIM: Presentation/demonstration of experiences and scenarios by organizations/projects to illustrate how Cloud computing can support Grid infrastructures. Presentation will describe both application and provision scenarios, focusing on the benefits obtained.
EXPERIENCES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Condor Pool on Clouds (Cycle Computing)
· The RESERVOIR Project: "The Reservoir Utility Computing Use Case". Presentation from Sun Microsystems. http://www.reservoir-fp7.eu/
· Grid-Ireland (They have evaluated the limitations of virtualization and cloud in production Grids, see http://www.terena.org/activities/nrens-n-grids/workshop-07/slides/3_virtualising_production.pdf)
· The Cumulus Project: Build a Scientific Cloud for a Data Center (University of Karlsruhe). They have early experiences of Cloud computing for data centers (www.cca08.org/speakers/wang.php)
· Cloud Computing for parallel Scientific HPC Applications (MIT). They have evaluated the feasibility of Running Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Climate Models on Amazon's EC2 (www.cca08.org/speakers/evangelinos.php)
· Mathias Dalheimer, Fraunhofer ITW Institute in Kaiserslautern, integrating EC2 services into the Fraunhofer PHASTGrid.
· Alatum from SCS in Singapore, which they say is a Grid but in fact it’s a Cloud: www.hpcwire.com/offthewire/Commercial_Grid_Alatum_Launched_in_Singapore.html
· Ewa Deelman, USC ISI, Clouds: An Opportunity for Scientific Applications, see slides at: http://www.cyfronet.pl/cgw08/programme.htmlSESSION 3: An Open-Source Technological Approach
Coordinator: Ignacio M. Llorente, Complutense University of MadridAIM: Presentation/demonstration of relevant technological components to build Cloud services by organization/projects to show the state of Cloud technology. Presentation should focus on the benefits and limitations of the technology and its position in the cloud ecosystem. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· what are currently the most interesting (and important) open source software components to 'lego' a cloud.TECHNOLOGIES SUGGESTED: (5 – 6 15-minute presentations)
· Grid Gain – Java Gateway to Cloud Computing (Grid Gain)
· The OpenNebula VM Manager (www.OpenNebula.org/)
· Globus Nimbus (workspace.globus.org/)
· Eucalyptus (eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu/)
· Hadoop (hadoop.apache.org)
· NC State University Virtual Computing Lab: see http://www.virtualizationstrategies.com/category/cloud-computing
Key VCL people at NC State are Sam Averitt, Eric Sills, Mladen Vouk. Slides: http://vcl.ncsu.edu/sites/default/files/VCL-ICVCI052008.pdf
· Haizea, Ian Foster and Borja Sotomayor (haizea.cs.uchicago.edu)
· EnginFrame Cloud Portal (linked to Cloud technology like e.g. OpenNebula)SESSION 4: Challenges and Future of Cloud Computing
Coordinator: Avner Algom, IGTAIM: Presentation of research and operation challenges by groups/projects. Presentation should focus on open standards common to Grids and Clouds, legal issues and key challenges on specific domains support, interoperability, SLA, privacy and security. This session will try to give an answer to the following questions:
· how can standards (and which ones) be useful to build a cloud, or connect my cluster/grid to a cloud.GROUPS/PROJECTS SUGGESTED: (2 – 3 15-minute presentations)
· Grid & Virtualization OGF WG (www.ogf.org/gf/group_info/view.php?group=gridvirt-wg)
· SLA@SOI European Project (www.sla-at-soi.eu)PANEL DISCUSSION (5-10-minute presentations + discussions)
· Benny Rochwerger (IBM Haifa): Challenges and Future of Cloud
· Avner giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloud Summit
· Martin giving a brief summary and lessons learned on the Cloudscape Workshop
· Wolfgang, giving a brief summary on DEISA on its way to an HPC Cloud
· Ignacio giving a brief summary about the integration of cloud-like technologies into future e-infrastructures
· All, summarizing their respective Session -
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GLIF Workshop Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLIF Workshop (1/5) (90 mins)
Erik-Jan Bos (SURFnet) & Gigi Karmous-Edwards (MCNC)Workshop on automating the connection of lightpaths for data-intensive scientific research.
The Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF) is a global virtual organisation that promotes lambda networking, and involves (National) Research and Education Networks, consortia and institutions who agree to share their lambda resources for use in data-intensive scientific research.This workshop will focus on the ongoing activities to design and implement an international lambdagrid infrastructure, and to provide relevant functions and services should be provided. This includes the identification and documentation of best practices, the development of a database of technical resources that combine scheduling mechanisms, investigating automation of control plane mechanisms, and helping define control plane architectures for Grids
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Grid technologies in e-Health Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGrid technologies in e-Health (90 mins)
Juliusz PukackiThe goal of this session is to present the way how eHealth community can benefit from grid technologies and standards
There is a lot of activities in eHealth area in a context of providing unified computing platform for clinitians and bioinformaticians. This session is focused on presenting requirements of eHealth community and how that requirements can be fulfilled by different grid infrastructures. The problem can be discussed in a context of:
- submission and management of computational jobs
- data access and data integration
- security and legal issues
- VO management
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Interconnecting Desktop and Service Grids - Impact on applications and the role of standards Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaInterconnecting Desktop and Service Grids - Impact on applications and the role of standards (1/2) (90 mins)
Peter Kacsuk and Vangelis FlorosThe proposed sessions will be organised jointly by EDGeS and EGEE. EDGeS is a European FP7 project with the goal of integrating service grids with various desktop grids. The selected service grid to produce a production EDGeS infrastructure is EGEE and the selected desktop grids are BOINC and XtremWeb. The current EDGeS infrastructure integrates the EDGeS VO of EGEE with the following desktop grids:
- SZTAKI desktop grid (public BOINC DG)
- Extremadura desktop grid (public BOINC DG)
- Univ. Westminster desktop grid (private BOINC DG)
- Correlation Systems Ltd. desktop grid (private BOINC DG)
- CNRS IN2P3 desktop grid (public and private XtremWeb DGs)
- AlmereGrid (public XtremWeb DG)
The primary goal of this session is to show for the EGEE users how the EDGeS technology can support their applications with an increased size of production grid system that contains computing resources from home PCs, school PCs, university PCs and town citizens' PCs. The session will also provide a large set of application porting case studies to show how EGEE applications and DG applications can be ported to EDGeS. Standards play a significant role in bridging the two worlds of Desktop and Service Grids. The session will also give the opportunity to present standards important for such Grid interoperation, their current status, potential gaps and discuss them with related OGF WGs.Note that although the selected service grid is EGEE and the selected desktop grids are BOINC and XtremWeb, EDGeS considers the standardization of integrating other type of service and desktop grids in the future and hence the session could be useful to users of other types of grids like GT4, Unicore, etc.
The session will consist of two subsessions with the following goals:
Subsession 1 will introduce the EDGeS project and explains the bridging technology that was developed in EDGeS in order to integrate EGEE with BOINC and XtremWeb based desktop grids and the grid standards used to achieve this. This subsession will also explain the structure and usage of the production EDGeS infrastructure that integrates the EDGeS VO of EGEE with several desktop grids. The relationship between GIN (OGF) standards and EDGeS will also be highlighted by Erwin Laure. Finally, a presentation will be given on the application porting technology that was developed in EDGeS in order to migrate existing EGEE and desktop grid applications into EDGeS and also to develop new applications for EDGeS.
Subsession 2 will introduce and describe those applications that are either already ported into EDGeS or under porting. These applications originally were either DG or EGEE applications. The presentations will show in detail how DG and EGEE applications were actually ported into EDGeS. The applications will cover a wide range of possible application fields showing that there is a large number of potential applications than can take advantage of the EDGeS infrastructure. This large selection of potential applications will help the EGEE users to decide if porting their current applications to EDGeS is feasible. The presentations are also planned to show that the actual migration of applications from EGEE to EDGeS is quite straightforward.
At the end of subsession-2 a discussion forum enables the audience to ask questions and discuss issues with the EDGeS experts and with the session speakers.
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Comparing integration concepts and technologies used in SG-DG integration projects 10mSpeaker: Prof. Peter Kacsuk (MTA SZTAKI)
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OurGrid integration with gLite based grids in EELA-2 10m
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Application Level Grid Interoperability with SAGA 10mSpeaker: Mr Andre Merzky (Vrije Universiteit)
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New developments for deploying a stable desktop grid 10mSpeaker: F. S. Sanz (BIFI)
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Using OGF standards in EDGeS 10mSpeaker: Etienne Urbah (Lab. de l'Accelerateur Lineaire (IN2P3) (LAL) - Universite de Pa)
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Survey of applications ported to EDGeS 15mSpeaker: Tamas Kiss (University of Westminster)
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Discussion forum 15m
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OGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions and Delivering the Potential of Energy Efficient Computing Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF-EU: Using IT to reduce Carbon Emissions (90 mins)
Ian Osborne, Intellect; Juan Caceres, Telefonica; Melanie Biette and James Ahtes, Atos Origin; David Wallom, OeRC; Ignacio Llorente, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Laurent LeFevre, INRIA; Craig LeIn the age of climate change the concept of Green IT is becoming a hot topic within the ICT industry and society as a whole, as we seek to minimise our energy consumption for economic, legal, business strategic reasons and social corporate image to our customers and maximise the benefits accruing to the end users of our services. This is also an area of interest to the Policy Maker with discussions emerging of potential regulation of Data Centres, and a new Code of Conduct aimed at data centre owners in the European Union. What are the standards implications from this? What are the metrics/tools to measure the energy efficiency (e.g. Power Usage Effectiveness – PUE, Data Centre Efficiency - DCE)? How might we better orchestrate the use of shared infrastructure to reflect energy policy decisions (e.g. what equipment is to be used for what task, where and at what time?) and the distribution of workloads based on the energy requirements and the established policies. This session is aimed at bringing more light to the subject, following an introduction workshop at OGF 23 in Barcelona and the launch of the new Code of Conduct in November.
This session is intended to be a call to action to the community to work in key areas of contribution allowing us to:- a) design more efficient infrastructures with minimal carbon impact; b) operate the infrastructures in line with energy policies which allow the user to orchestrate the most efficient use of their energy resources; c) identify areas where standards can be developed to incorporate the necessary functionality. We intend illustrating the case for change by reference to recent moves in the regulatory environment in Europe, notably the EU Code of Conduct for Data Centres; as well as user case studies featuring advances in technologies which can assist in the efficient deployment of compute capability.
Agenda:
Our plan is to run a day long workshop (4*90 minute sessions) starting with a session reminding us of the context in which Green IT is meaningful and updating colleagues from around the world on progress made in their own communities. We will introduce expert speakers, describe the early “standards” work being done in governmental and industry agencies and have identified colleagues who can bring their own stories of Green IT in action in their own work environments as early case studies.
Speakers in the initial session include: Liam Newcombe, Romonet/BCS Data Centre Specialist Group – the architect of the EU Code of Conduct and developer of an engineering model for energy consumption in the data centre; and Paul Strong, Distinguished Scientist at e-Bay and OGF Board Member. We expect some user examples: Contributed by customers or collaborators of Atos Origin, Barcelona Supercomputing Centre and Telefonica.
Having framed the issue and identified the motivators and key stakeholders, we would then move on to working through the issue in more detail:-
We would like to consider some form of reference model for end to end energy management. Components may include:
• Monitoring (e.g. a sensor network)/Measuring
• Decision support tools (bringing the right advice to the environment)
• Enactment tools (e.g. Virtualisation, migration, rack power up/down)
We will need to work with an industry expert group to flesh these concepts out in order to bring the detail to the forum.
We would then close the workshop with a Call to action. Assuming that we have been successful in building the community and achieving a consensus on how to move forwards. -
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Production Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaProduction Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session (1) (90 mins)
Morris Riedel
(PGI-WG) Group DiscussionThe PGI group will work on their milestones and documents and welcomes anybody that might have interest in defining/profiling a set of OGF standards for production Grid infrastructures and their use cases.
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Coffee 30m
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Astronomy and Astrophysics Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAstronomy & Astrophysics community is in EGEE since 2004 with two pilot applications now in EGEE-III. Ever since the presence of the AA community in EGEE is continuously growing and now five funded and eight unfunded research groups contribute to the AA cluster with applications and use-cases. AA applications are particularly interesting given that they are extremely challenging in terms of resource demands, both conventional and non conventional. Three main AA VOs are in place in EGEE; two of them are dedicated to the pilot applications; the last one is a generic VO where new AA user communities can find adequate resources to start their activities. The interest of the AA community for EGEE and its Grid infrastructure is further increasing and new research groups asked recently to join the AA VOs to exploit EGEE Grid facilities through them.
The 4th User Forum is an excellent opportunity to get an overview of the progress in adopting EGEE and its Grid infrastructure within the AA community. Ten AA abstracts have been submitted for the User Forum and this certainly represents a success. Eight of them have been proposed as oral contributions, one is a poster and finally one has been proposed as a demo. Contributions equally address scientific and technological aspects related to the usage of the Grid technology as well as the adoption of tools and services to make easier or more efficient the porting of applications. Besides the contributions aimed at demonstrate progresses in migrating applications to Grid, the key topic to discuss in the framework of the 4th User Forum AA session will be the discussion about the necessary actions to be undertaken for the transition of the AA community to EGI.
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Outcome of the Euro-VO DCA WP5 Activities 20mWe present the results achieved by WP5 of the EU-funded Euro-VO DCA (Data Centre Alliance) project, aimed at assisting EU Astronomical Data Centres to take up VObs (Virtual Observatory) standards and share best practices for data providers. WP5 dealt with three aspects: a) how Data Centres can benefit from Grid computing; b) how Astronomers can benefit from Grid computing through Data Centres; c) definition of tools and standards to make Grid infrastructures and the VObs fully interoperable.Speaker: Dr Claudio Vuerli (INAF-OA Trieste)
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On-line Visualization for Grid-based Astronomical Parametric Studies 20mThe presented work is aimed at the creation and testing of on-line visualization for Grid-based Parametric Studies as a sequence application in Grid environment. The design is tested on Astronomical simulations. The simulation of the Oort-cloud formation was performed. The dynamical evolution of the test particles was followed via numerical integration, in the GRID, for the period of 2 G-year. The main reason for using the grid was the need for visual verification during long computations.Speaker: Mrs Eva Pajorova (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia)
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Using DIANE for astrophysics applications 20mIn this paper, we present our experiences with using DIANE for astrophysics applications. The applications have the characteristics of parametric study: many small independent tasks with the same code and different data. Using DIANE can improve the reliability and response time of the applications in comparison with standard gLite parametric jobs. This will help developers with parametric applications to port their applications to DIANE quicklySpeaker: Viet Tran (Institute of Informatics, Slovakia)
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Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaLife Sciences is a very active field of research using the EGEE infrastructure. Several EGEE related projects are also exploring the use of gLite middleware for bioinformatics and healthcare. For several years now, the Biomed Virtual Organisation keeps standing as the first non LHC Virtual Organisation consuming about 5% of the infrastructure resources.The User Forum is a wonderful opportunity to get an overview of the present adoption of grids in the Life Sciences communities through the dedicated oral sessions session but also through the posters and demos exhibition as well as the OGF Life Sciences and e-Health workshop. Complementary to the "medical imaging" session, the "bioinformatics and biomedicine" session programme reflects the variety of topics currently addressed on EGEE and its related projects.
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Using a pilot job framework for cancer research on the Dutch Life Science Grid 20mCancer research has shown that cancer does not arise from a single mutation but requires multiple mutations to occur. Finding out which mutations occur together is a promising branch of biological research. In order to perform this research a large amount of data is needed to reach statistical significance. A pilot job framework on the Dutch Life Science Grid was used to acquire very promising results.Speaker: Mr Jan Bot (TU Delft)
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Integromics: a grid-enabled platform for integration of advanced bioinformatics tools and data 20mAccording to the “Integromics” philosophy, coined by John Weinstein (National Cancer Institute (NCI), Bethesda, USA), we propose an integromic framework for data and tools integration issues associated with genomic research. Over the past years, massive, complex and heterogeneous amount of biological data have been generated in laboratories, including gene sequences, information on gene expression (transcripts, metabolites and proteins), protein structures and metabolic pathways.Speaker: Dr Luca Corradi (university of genoa)
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GRISSOM a web based Grid portal and repository for interpretation and storage of DNA microarray experiments 20mGRISSOM (GRids for In Silico Systems biOlogy and Medicine) enables the exploitation of GRID resources for microarray biological data parallel processing and provides experts with a complete web-based solution for managing, searching and disseminating biological knowledge in the context of gene expression patterns on a genomic scale. The platform is developed and deployed using open source software components. Advanced security means ensured authentication, and the integrity and encryption of information.Speaker: Dr Aristotelis Chatziioannou (National Hellenic Research Foundation,IBRB)Slides
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Large scale bioinformatics experiment about System Biology 20mPredicting the effect of perturbations of complex biological systems is key to being able to solve important problems, in particular in the case of human diseases. It is highly likely, that such predictions will have to be based on computer models that represent all relevant components of the networks involved as well as their interactions in sufficient detail and accuracy.Speaker: Dr Christophe Blanchet (CNRS IBCP)
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DAIS Working Group Session Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaDAIS Working Group Session (90 mins)
Mario Antonioletti, Isao Kojima
(DAIS-WG) Group DiscussionThis session will discuss updates in the implementation of the
DAIS-WG standards and discuss progress in the RDF sepcification documents.
Agenda:
1) Update to the Community
2) WS-DAI implementation status
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GLIF Workshop Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLIF Workshop (1/5) (90 mins)
Erik-Jan Bos (SURFnet) & Gigi Karmous-Edwards (MCNC)Workshop on automating the connection of lightpaths for data-intensive scientific research.
The Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF) is a global virtual organisation that promotes lambda networking, and involves (National) Research and Education Networks, consortia and institutions who agree to share their lambda resources for use in data-intensive scientific research.This workshop will focus on the ongoing activities to design and implement an international lambdagrid infrastructure, and to provide relevant functions and services should be provided. This includes the identification and documentation of best practices, the development of a database of technical resources that combine scheduling mechanisms, investigating automation of control plane mechanisms, and helping define control plane architectures for Grids
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GRAAP#1 Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGRAAP#1 (90 mins)
Wolfgang Ziegler
(GRAAP-WG) Group DiscussionGRAAP session 1 will be used to present the GRAAP activities since the last OGF in Singapore. We will then continue the work on the experience document.
Agenda:
- Progress since last OGF
- Experience document
- Negotiation protocol
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Grid Projects and Collaborations Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAs sustainability is becoming ever-so important, the realization of infrastructures on a national/regional basis are emerging to the forefront of recent Grid projects and joint collaborations. This session, broken into two 90-minute intervals, demonstrates a variety of these projects and collaborations covering the latest developments and services using the EGEE infrastructure and other national/regional infrastructures.
A variety of regions have shown signs of growth and maturation over the past few years, namely Africa, Latin American, Sicily and South Africa. Each will be presenting how Grid technologies have been recently applied and specific results achieved either in HPC applications, integration of national infrastructures into EGEE, illustration of Service Grids vs. Opportunistic Grids or regional GILDA activities ensuring that new users can fully understand the characteristics of the Grid services offered.
The EGEE infrastructure has also opened doors to new collaborations and service offerings in specific sectors such as bioinformatics together with the LIBI project and interconnection of other Grid technologies such as BOINC Grid through the EDGeS project.Finally, this session offers participants and inside look at new opportunities for new use cases to obtain early access to EGEE services and WLCG user communities through the EGEE-III Pre-Production Service.
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16:00
HPC Applications on the Sicilian Grid Infrastructure 20mThe Sicilian Grid infrastructure has been modified to support both academic and commercial HPC applications. After various HW/SW enhancements the PI2S2 infrastructure now runs many massively parallel programs covering several areas from Fluid Dynamics (Fluent, OpenFOAM) to Chemistry (GAMESS), from Astro-Physics (Flash) to Bio-Informatics (ClustalW). The present talk describes the adopted techniques and achieved performances.Speaker: Dr Marcello Iacono-Manno (Consorzio COMETA)
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16:20
The South African National Grid Initiative 20mThe South African Department of Science and Technology (DST) has made cyberinfrastructure a priority for enabling a knowledge-based economy, and for fostering scientific and economic growth. A cutting-edge national research network (SANREN) and a centre for high-performance computing (CHPC) provide the raw tools for enabling the deployment of a national e-Infrastructure. The South African National Grid Initiative is being deployed nationwide in order to provide the platform to exploit these.Speaker: Dr Bruce Becker (UCT-CERN Research Centre)
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16:40
GILDA activities in AFRICA 20mScience researchers, educators, and students in Africa are not able to take advantage of ithe nformation revolution because the digital divide is growing and denying poor countries access to its benefits. They are becoming increasingly marginalized as the world of education and science becomes increasingly Internet-dependent. GILDA are disseminating the Grid technology and its results to a wider audience in the African area, training new communities and involving new institutes to provide resources.Speaker: Valeria Ardizzone (INFN Catania)
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17:00
The EUAsiaGrid Project: paving the way towards a global e-Science infrastructure in the Asia-Pacific region 20mThe EUAsiaGrid project has been funded by the European Commission to widen the uptake of e-Research and, more specifically, the EGEE e-Infrastructure in the Asia-Pacific region. The consortium provides support for infrastructure development and application porting as well as training, education and outreach. We describe the background of the project as well as its structure and workplan.Speaker: Mr Marco Paganoni (INFN and University of Milano-Bicocca)
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16:00
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17:30
New Application Areas Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThis session reviews a diverse range of new applications in the field of grid computing. The first of the two 90 minute sessions introduces the event simulation package, OMNeT++ and also explores chip model testing using a black box model. In addition, the session presents a case study using the D4Science Virtual Research Environments to produce AquaMaps, that document the presence of certain species in various regions of the world. The integration of ETICs services into the EGEE infrastructure is also explored, with the extension of ETICs services to use gLite submission facilities to submit jobs to the grid.
The second part of the session opens with an introduction to the vibrant international community of e-Social Science, in particular the porting of social simulation code to the EGEE grid. In answer to the challenges presented to the business community by the need to adapt rapidly to changing resource requirements, a case study presents a cloud-like solution over a gLite infrastructure. Two different scenarios will be discussed: a multi-tier web-based application hosting and a virtualization based hosting. Finally, the area of Civil Protection will be addressed, in the first instance by a presentation of research strategies taking steps towards a roadmap for an advanced European level e-Infrastructure, in order to manage risk more efficiently. A further case study addresses the remote control and monitoring of environmental wireless sensor networks for climate monitoring and to enable fast reactions to natural disasters.-
16:00
Enabling OMNET++ Simulations on the Grid 20mOMNeT++ is a C++-based discrete event simulation package primarily targeted at simulating computer networks and other distributed systems. In collaboration with the MTA SZTAKI Application Porting Centre the OMNET++ framework has been ported to the EGEE Grid. The presentation introduces the steps that were taken to enable OMNET++ on gLite. The work has exploited the parameter definition services of OMNET++ and the parameter study support tools ofthe P-GRADE grid Portal.Speaker: Mr Gergely Sipos (MTA SZTAKI)
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16:20
Chip Test Generation Based on Black-Box Model 20mLarge and complex chip model testing is a computationally intensive task. It is not possible to test every single input and get output correlations for all tests. The search space is too big to fit any supercomputer. However, using Monte Carlo methods and splitting computations across the grid it is still possible to accumulate enough information about black-box inner workings. Here I am going to present how grid resources were allocated and utilized to achieve superior results.Speaker: Mr Saulius Petrauskas (Kaunas University of Technology)
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16:40
On the D4Science Approach Toward AquaMaps Richness Maps Generation 20mAquaMaps are resources resulting in Earth maps enriched to show the likelihood of a certain species or a combination of species to live in specific regions. The procedure leading to such maps is computationally intensive and prone to be executed multiple times to enhance the quality of the predictions. The results obtained by exploiting the EGEE production infrastructure through the D4Science Virtual Research Environments (VREs) to produce collections of such maps are presented.Speaker: Dr pasquale pagano (CNR-ISTI)
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17:00
Integrating the ETICS services in the EGEE Grid Infrastructure 20mETICS provides software projects with an "out-of-the-box" build and test system. It allows users to submit builds and tests on a variety of platforms. Currently ETICS uses Metronome for the management of build jobs. The jobs are submitted to machines maintained within the ETICS project. The ETICS2 project is extending the ETICS services in order to use gLite's submission facilities to submit jobs using gLite. This will allow the integration of ETICS services into the EGEE infrastructure.Speaker: Valerio Venturi (INFN)
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16:00
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17:30
OGF Reference Model Review Part 1 Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGF Reference Model Review Part 1 (90 mins)
David Snelling & Paul Strong
(RM-WG) Group DiscussionThis session, part 1 of 2 will review the OGF Reference Model document version 2 prior to release.
Agenda:
Recap and overview of OGF Reference Model v2.0
Discussion and refinement -
16:00
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17:30
Production Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaProduction Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session (1) (90 mins)
Morris Riedel
(PGI-WG) Group DiscussionThe PGI group will work on their milestones and documents and welcomes anybody that might have interest in defining/profiling a set of OGF standards for production Grid infrastructures and their use cases.
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17:30
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19:00
Astronomy and Astrophysics Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAstronomy & Astrophysics community is in EGEE since 2004 with two pilot applications now in EGEE-III. Ever since the presence of the AA community in EGEE is continuously growing and now five funded and eight unfunded research groups contribute to the AA cluster with applications and use-cases. AA applications are particularly interesting given that they are extremely challenging in terms of resource demands, both conventional and non conventional. Three main AA VOs are in place in EGEE; two of them are dedicated to the pilot applications; the last one is a generic VO where new AA user communities can find adequate resources to start their activities. The interest of the AA community for EGEE and its Grid infrastructure is further increasing and new research groups asked recently to join the AA VOs to exploit EGEE Grid facilities through them.
The 4th User Forum is an excellent opportunity to get an overview of the progress in adopting EGEE and its Grid infrastructure within the AA community. Ten AA abstracts have been submitted for the User Forum and this certainly represents a success. Eight of them have been proposed as oral contributions, one is a poster and finally one has been proposed as a demo. Contributions equally address scientific and technological aspects related to the usage of the Grid technology as well as the adoption of tools and services to make easier or more efficient the porting of applications. Besides the contributions aimed at demonstrate progresses in migrating applications to Grid, the key topic to discuss in the framework of the 4th User Forum AA session will be the discussion about the necessary actions to be undertaken for the transition of the AA community to EGI.
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17:40
Detection of compact objects in maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation with Planck 20mThe detection of compact objects, extragalactic point sources and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich clusters, in maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB), is a very important problem. These objects contaminate the underlying CMB signal and their detection and characterization allows to produce cleaner maps of the CMB, that will be used to extract cosmological parameters and to look for signatures of non-gaussianity. In addition, these catalogues can be used to study their physical properties.Speaker: Dr Marcos López-Caniego (IFCA-CSIC)
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18:00
ESIP - Grid based Satellite Data Processing Platform 20mThe Environment oriented Satellite Data Processing Platform (ESIP) is developed through the SEE-GRID-SCI (SEE-GRID eInfrastructure for regional eScience) project (2008-2010), funded by the European Commission. ESIP provides a Grid based software platform for satellite image processing and development of environmental applications. The services and interactive tools are available by Web applications. ESIP will be extended to a larger Grid infrastructure by processing real data for SEE regions.Speaker: Prof. Dorian Gorgan (Technical University of Cluj-Napoca)
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18:20
Migration of the MAGIC Datacenter and Monte Carlo simulation to a Grid infrastructure 20mThe MAGIC collaboration is moving from a computing model based on local computer farms to a Grid based model. Here we present the recent progress in the adoption of the Grid infrastructure in MAGIC using the current resources of the MAGIC Virtual Organization on EGEE.Speaker: Roger Firpo Curcoll (Port d'Informació Científica (PIC))
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18:40
TheoSSA on AstroGrid-D 20mWe combine a Virtual Observatory service for stellar model spectra with a grid compute service. Astronomers can request model spectra according to certain specifications. If no pre-calculated results are available, the model calculation is executed in a Grid, which provides the necessary scaling and greater reliability. This work is a collaboration of the German Astrophysical Virtual Observatory (GAVO) and AstroGrid-D, the German Astronomy Community Grid (GACG).Speakers: Dr Harry Enke (Astrophysical Institute Potsdam), Dr Iliya Nickelt (Astrophysical Institute Potsdam)
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17:40
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19:00
Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaLife Sciences is a very active field of research using the EGEE infrastructure. Several EGEE related projects are also exploring the use of gLite middleware for bioinformatics and healthcare. For several years now, the Biomed Virtual Organization keeps standing as the first non LHC Virtual Organization consumming about 5% of the infrastructure resources. .The User Forum is a wonderful opportunity to get an overview of the present adoption of grids in the Life Sciences communities through the dedicated oral sessions session but also through the posters and demos exhibition as well as the OGF Life Sciences and e-Health workshop. Complementary to the "medical imaging" session, the "bioinformatics and biomedicine" session programme reflects the variety of topics currently addressed on EGEE and its related projects.
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17:30
Genome Wide Haplotype analyses of human complex diseases with the EGEE grid 25mGenome-wide association studies using hundred of thousands of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are commonly used for identifying new susceptibility genes for complex human diseases, but are generally restricted to single locus analyses because of computational burden. We illustrate here that their extension to genome-wide haplotype analyses is feasible thanks to the EGEE computing grid infrastructure.Speaker: Dr David Tregouet (INSERM UMR_S 525, UPMC)
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17:55
Computational annotation of UTR cis-regulatory modules using the EGEE (gLite) infrastructure. 20mMany studies report on the detection and functional characterization of cis-regulatory motifs in untranslated regions (UTRs) of Messenger Ribonucleic Acid (mRNAs), but little is known about the nature and functional role of their distribution. To address this issue we have developed a computational approach which resorts to data mining techniques. This approach is particularly CPU demanding and requires considerable memory resources. Here we show how this problem is faced on the EGEE computing infrastructure.Speaker: Eliana Salvemini (Department of Computer Science - University of Bari)
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18:15
Cancer surveillance network on a grid infrastructure 20mNowadays, grid technologies are sufficiently mature to apply to different needs other than large scale computing. The grid possibilities in terms of data transfer and access are reliable and secure enough to fit medical data requirements. In the Auvergne region, a Cancer Surveillance Network using grid technologies is currently under design. This network aims at improving the exchange of information between actors involved in oncology (anatomopathologists, radiologists and screening organisations).Speakers: Dr Lydia Maigne (CNRS IN2P3 LPC), Mr Paul De Vlieger (CNRS IN2P3 LPC / ERIM)
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17:30
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19:00
GLIF Workshop Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGLIF Workshop (1/5) (90 mins)
Erik-Jan Bos (SURFnet) & Gigi Karmous-Edwards (MCNC)Workshop on automating the connection of lightpaths for data-intensive scientific research.
The Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF) is a global virtual organisation that promotes lambda networking, and involves (National) Research and Education Networks, consortia and institutions who agree to share their lambda resources for use in data-intensive scientific research.This workshop will focus on the ongoing activities to design and implement an international lambdagrid infrastructure, and to provide relevant functions and services should be provided. This includes the identification and documentation of best practices, the development of a database of technical resources that combine scheduling mechanisms, investigating automation of control plane mechanisms, and helping define control plane architectures for Grids
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17:30
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19:00
GRAAP#2 Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGRAAP#2 (90 mins)
Wolfgang Ziegler
(GRAAP-WG) Group DiscussionGRAAP session 2 will be used to continue the work on the experience document. The rest of the session will be used to work on the negotiation protocol for WS-Agreement.
Agenda:
- Continue work on experience document
- Changes in WS-Agreement
- Presentation of current work in the
EU SmartLM project
- Work on negotiation specification -
17:30
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19:00
Grid Projects and Collaborations Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaAs sustainability is becoming ever-so important, the realization of infrastructures on a national/regional basis are emerging to the forefront of recent Grid projects and joint collaborations. This session, broken into two 90-minute intervals, demonstrates a variety of these projects and collaborations covering the latest developments and services using the EGEE infrastructure and other national/regional infrastructures.
A variety of regions have shown signs of growth and maturation over the past few years, namely Africa, Latin American, Sicily and South Africa. Each will be presenting how Grid technologies have been recently applied and specific results achieved either in HPC applications, integration of national infrastructures into EGEE, illustration of Service Grids vs. Opportunistic Grids or regional GILDA activities ensuring that new users can fully understand the characteristics of the Grid services offered.
The EGEE infrastructure has also opened doors to new collaborations and service offerings in specific sectors such as bioinformatics together with the LIBI project and interconnection of other Grid technologies such as BOINC Grid through the EDGeS project.Finally, this session offers participants and inside look at new opportunities for new use cases to obtain early access to EGEE services and WLCG user communities through the EGEE-III Pre-Production Service.
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17:30
Pre-Production Service in EGEEIII: a new service for new use cases 20mSince the first phase of the EGEE project, the EGEE Pre-Production Service (PPS) has offered early access to grid services in preview to EGEE and WLCG user communities. The users of the Pre-Production Service are enabled to test their applications against the latest versions of the gLite middleware in order to evaluate functional changes and new features.Speaker: Mr Antonio Retico (CERN)
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17:50
A Symbiotic Deployment of a Service Grid and an Opportunistic Grid over the same e-Infrastructure: the EELA-2 Experience 20mA service grid (SG) assembles high performance, dedicated resources, while an opportunistic grid (OG) scavenges spare capacity from desktops. A mutually beneficially co-existence model is proposed for a hybrid e-infrastructure. On one side, the OG allows shared resources to be added to the e-infrastructure and also bag-of-tasks (BoT) applications to be drained out from the queues of the SG’s clusters, while on the other side the power of the OG is increased by scavenging idle cycles from the SG.Speaker: Prof. Francisco Brasileiro (Federal University of Campina Grande, Brazil)
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18:10
EDGeS Bridge technology to interconnect EGEE and BOINC grids 20mBoth EGEE and BOINC are very popular grids but their interconection was not implemented until this work. Within the EDGeS project we developed a bridge technology by which EGEE VOs can send jobs to BOINC desktop grids and vice versa BOINC systems can send work units to EGEE VOs. The talk will explain the architecture of the EDGeS bridge and its usage. The BOINC->EGEE bridge has been working in production since October 2008, and the EGEE->BOINC bridge has been prototyped and will be in production in April 2009.Speaker: Prof. Peter Kacsuk (MTA SZTAKI)
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18:30
Advances in the LIBI Project, a Virtual Laboratory for Bioinformatics 20mThe LIBI project (International Laboratory of BioInformatics), aims at building a virtual laboratory for the simulation of complex “in silico” experiments in Genomics and Proteomics. The laboratory is a Grid Problem Solving Environment, built on top of the EGEE infrastructure, in which several services for submitting and monitoring the biological applications on the Grid have been developed. The main results from the technological and biological point of view will be presented.Speaker: Prof. Giovanni Aloisio (SPACI Consortium & University of Salento, Lecce)
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17:30
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17:30
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19:00
New Application Areas Michelangelo (120)
Michelangelo (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThis session reviews a diverse range of new applications in the field of grid computing. The first of the two 90 minute sessions introduces the event simulation package, OMNeT++ and also explores chip model testing using a black box model. In addition, the session presents a case study using the D4Science Virtual Research Environments to produce AquaMaps, that document the presence of certain species in various regions of the world. The integration of ETICs services into the EGEE infrastructure is also explored, with the extension of ETICs services to use gLite submission facilities to submit jobs to the grid.
The second part of the session opens with an introduction to the vibrant international community of e-Social Science, in particular the porting of social simulation code to the EGEE grid. In answer to the challenges presented to the business community by the need to adapt rapidly to changing resource requirements, a case study presents a cloud-like solution over a gLite infrastructure. Two different scenarios will be discussed: a multi-tier web-based application hosting and a virtualization based hosting. Finally, the area of Civil Protection will be addressed, in the first instance by a presentation of research strategies taking steps towards a roadmap for an advanced European level e-Infrastructure, in order to manage risk more efficiently. A further case study addresses the remote control and monitoring of environmental wireless sensor networks for climate monitoring and to enable fast reactions to natural disasters.-
17:30
e-Social Science - scaling up social scientific investigations 20mSocial scientists are not traditionally users of advanced ICTs but important drivers such as demographic change, migration, environmental impact of human activity or worldwide economic crises demand new approaches. Researchers are beginning to respond to this challenge and are looking for ways to exploit new sources of data and computational resources to generate new knowledge about the social world. We present early experiences with porting social simulation code to the EGEE grid.Speaker: Alexander Voss (University of Manchester)
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17:50
Enabling business applications over a Grid infrastructure 20mIn today market companies need to be agile and adapt to fast changes. Resource dimensioning is an hard and risky task which may lead companies to under-provision their data-center, which means unable to cope with peak loads, or over-provisioning it, which means unable to fullfill their ROI. We present our cloud-like solution over a gLite infrastructure. Two different scenarios are shown: a multi-tier web-based application hosting and a virtualization based hosting.Speaker: Dr Carmelo Ragusa (Cometa consortium at University of Messina)
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18:10
Research strategies for an advanced grid e-infrastructure for Civil Protection applications 20mIn the context of the EU co-funded project CYCLOPS the problem of designing a grid-based e-Infrastructure for Civil protection (CP) applications has been addressed. This work presents the main outcomes of the project, namely the proposed architectural framework and the research strategies aiming to its possible implementation.Speaker: Dr Paolo Mazzetti (IMAA-CNR)
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18:30
Integrating a Wireless Sensor Network into Grid Civil Protection Applications 20mThe CYCLOPS project is a FP6 SSA which aims to bring together two important Communities: GMES and Grid, focusing on the operative sector of European Civil Protection (CP). Recently University of Minho has done some work testing one of the CYCLOPS case studies - GRID deployment of control and monitoring of environmental wireless sensor networks (WSN) for climate monitoring and natural disasters reaction.Speaker: Mr Bruno Oliveira (Universidade do Minho)
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17:30
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19:00
OGSA Authz Working Group Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGSA Authz Working Group (90 mins)
David Chadwick, Valerio Venturi
(OGSA-AUTHZ-WG) Group DiscussionDiscussion sesison for the OGSA Authz Working Group
Agenda:
1. Appoint Note Takers
2. Agenda Bashing
3. Resolution of outstanding Public Comments on WG Specifications
5. AOB -
17:30
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19:00
Production Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session Dante (550)
Dante (550)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaProduction Grid Infrastructure (PGI) Standard Working Session (3) (90 mins)
Morris Riedel
(PGI-WG) Group DiscussionThe PGI group will work on their milestones and documents and welcomes anybody that might have interest in defining/profiling a set of OGF standards for production Grid infrastructures and their use cases.
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17:30
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19:00
RNS 1.1 Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaRNS 1.1 (90 mins)
Andrew Grimshaw
(OGSA-NAMING-WG) Group DiscussionThe Resource Namespace Service specification was released over a year ago. Since then a number of groups have implemented the specifications. During that effort some minor shortcomings with the specification were uncovered. This session will discuss a proposed RNS 1.1 that addresses these shortcomings.
Agenda:
1) RNS status
2)Discussion of RNS problems (as discused in the mailing lists of GFS and OGSA-Naming
3) Presentation of RNS 1.1 specification
4) Vote on changes and document -
17:30
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19:00
Reference Model v2.0 Part 2 Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaReference Model v2.0 Part 2 (90 mins)
David Snelling & Paul Strong
(RM-WG) Group DiscussionDiscussion to define the review process and route to releasing the document
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09:00
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10:30
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10:30
Dashboard tutorial - Site Monitoring for sites serving LHC VOs Leopardi (50)
Leopardi (50)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaThe tutorial will cover the tools recently developed in the Dashboard
framework and focuses on the needs of the LHC VOs and Site
administrators.
As it was stated during the CCRC08 postmortem WLCG workshop, the sites do not get enough information whether they are serving the VOs well. For sites which are serving several VO it is difficult to browse multiple
VO-specific monitoring systems which provide this information to the VO
community. During the tutorial the participants will get an opportunity to
try the tools which aim to answer the questions:
What LHC VOs are running at my site? What is the success rate of job
processing or data transfer for every VO? What is the statsus of every
activity running at my site from the VO point of view?
On the other hand the developers of the tools regard this tutorial as a
good chance to get the feedback from the users.Speakers: Pablo Saiz, Benjamin Gaidioz, Elisa Lanciotti (CERN, IT/GS group)
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09:00
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10:30
Firewall Virtualization for Grid Applications - WG Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaFirewall Virtualization for Grid Applications - WG (90 mins)
Ralph Niederberger, Inder Monga
(FVGA-WG) Group DiscussionThe Firewall Issues research group (fi-rg) has documented the use cases and classified the issues that Grid applications experience when trying to traverse and/or control data transport policy enforcement devices (GFD.83) and has published a document that analyzes and categorizes new firewall protocols, architectures and on-demand frameworks currently available (GFD.142).
The Firewall Virtualization for Grid Applications - Working Group will leverage the application requirements from the FI-RG to standardize a set of service definitions for a virtualized control interface into firewalls and other midboxes allowing the grid applications to securely and dynamically request application/workflow-specific services from those devices, for the duration of the service.
This session will provide a short introduction into the work proposed in FVGA, a status update on current work and will end up with group discussions on further work to reach the goals defined.
Agenda:
1.) Introduction and status of FVGA-WG
2.) Group discussions -
09:00
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10:30
GHPN Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGHPN (90 mins)
Cees de Laat & Dimitra Simeonedou
(GHPN-RG) Group DiscussionCoordinate and delve into the recent developments in GLIF and the associated working groups in OGF (NM, NML, NSI). Presentations and discussions will include overall architecture proposals and issues for the control/service planes as protoyped by the various stakeholders.
Coordinate and delve into the recent developments in GLIF and the associated working groups in OGF (NM, NML, NSI). Presentations and discussions will include overall architecture proposals and issues for the control/service planes as protoyped by the various stakeholders.
Agenda:
TBD -
09:00
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10:30
Grid License Management BoF Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGrid License Management BoF (90 mins)
Mathias DalheimerSoftware licensing hinders the adoption of grid computing technology in the industry. We will explore the technical, legal and business challenges.
Lately, three grid projects deal with grid licensing technology. We will present the current state-of-the-art in this fiels. In addition we will present the legal and business challenges.
Agenda:
(tentative agenda)
- Introduction
- Three grid license management projects:
* BeInGrid technology
* SmartLM technology
* GenLM product
- Legal restrictions
- Business implications -
09:00
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10:30
IPv6 Compliance of Grid Middleware Raffaello (80)
Raffaello (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaIn this session two aspects of IPv6 and its impact on the Grid will be presented:
- The overall need for IPv6 and the related timescale for its widespread deployment
- Currently on-going activities on IPv6 in the major Grid projects world-wide : the IPv6 compliance of Grid middleware distributions The first part will be devoted to describing the motivations behind the forthcoming transition to IPv6 together with the major new features and relevant aspects of IPv6 with respect to IPv4. The second part will be dealing more specifically with grid middleware. Example of IPv6 compliant middleware will be given and the description of the currently on-going activities to make IPv6 compliant other relevant middleware distributions will be given. For the first part, speakers from software companies producing IPv6 software and OS and authorities dealing with the internet registry will be invited to talk. For the second part of the session, speakers from major international Grid projects and middleware producers will be invited to report on both the status of their middleware w.r.t. IPv6 compliance and the on-going activities related to IPv6.
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09:00
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10:30
My Experience with Cloud Deployment Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaMy Experience with Cloud Deployment (90 mins)
Edward M. GoldbergWith over 100 deployments on Cloud Platforms to date, I have a down to earth perspective about where Cloud Success comes from. With all of the hype and talk about Clouds it is refreshing to hear what works and what does not work.
Agenda:
Show a few examples of good Cloud Solutions and a few bad fit issues.Open the floor for a good Q and A about Clouds.
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09:00
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10:30
OGSA Status and next steps Caravaggio (120)
Caravaggio (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaOGSA Status and next steps (90 mins)
Andrew Grimshaw and Hiro Kishimoto
(OGSA-WG) Group DiscussionThe sesion will examine the current state of the OGSA specications and profile space and determine what needs to be done next.
Agenda:
1) Status of various OGSA specs
Document status
Implementation status
2) Adoption/interoperation status
3) How to push adoption
4) Next steps? E.g. profiles with usage records and BES, implementation descriptions, etc. -
10:30
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11:00
Brunch 30m
- 11:00 → 12:30
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14:30
GRAAP#3 Da Vinci (120)
Da Vinci (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGRAAP#3 (90 mins)
Wolfgang Ziegler
(GRAAP-WG) Group DiscussionGRAAP session 3 will be used to continue the work on the negotiation protocol for WS-Agreement.
Agenda:
- Continue work on negotiation specification -
13:00
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13:45
Grid Security Requirements Donatello (40)
Donatello (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaGrid Security Requirements (90 mins)
Philippe Massonet (CETIC, Belgium); Alvaro Arenas (STFC RAL, UK)Starting and operating a secure virtual organisation (VO) requires that security objectives and requirements have been defined and are enforced throughout the VO lifecycle. In this talk we describe how a goal-oriented requirements engineering method has be tailored for defining VO security objectives and refining them into enforceable security policies. We also introduce an Eclipse-based design tool that allows specifying and refining security objectives into requirements, and derive policies from requirements.
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13:00
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RightScale Cloud Users Group - BOF Galilei (120)
Galilei (120)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaRightScale Cloud Users Group - BOF (90 mins)
Edward M. GoldbergMeeting and tutorial about the RightScale Cloud DashBoard Platform. Talks and demos of the Cloud Platforms and hot to use the tools.
Learn from the experience of current users of Cloud Computing.
Agenda:
Introduce the RightScale users Group and open a very one on one Q and A about real Cloud Use and Best Practice. -
13:00
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14:30
Usage Record Session Bernini (80)
Bernini (80)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaUsage Record Session (90 mins)
Donal Fellows, Xiayou Chen
(UR-WG) Group DiscussionThis session will cover experiences with UR1 and requirements for and work towards future versions.
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13:00
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14:30
eInfrastructure for civil protection (CLOSED) Machiavelli (40)
Machiavelli (40)
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaeInfrastructure for civil protection (Closed) (90 mins)
Closed meeting for the eInfrastructure for civil protection
Location: Machiavelli
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14:00
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17:30
Introduction to gLite (OBS! At the University of Catania) University of Catania (CERN)
University of Catania
CERN
University of Catania Department of Physics and AstronomyThe purpose of this session is to provide an introduction on gLite middleware. The session will also include introductory presentations and practicals work, submitting jobs to EGEE using command line.
For more information, and to register, please visit:
http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceDisplay.py?confId=48883 -
14:00
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17:00
Parallel Computing with MATLAB on Grids (OBS! At the University of Catania!) University of Catania
University of Catania
Le Ciminiere, Catania, Sicily, Italy
Viale Africa 95100 CataniaParallel Computing with MATLAB on Grids
The tutorial will present how parallel MATLAB programs enable you to take advantage of hardware resources, ranging from desktop machines to Grid systems. Attendees will learn to express task- and data-parallelism in the MATLAB language, by using constructs such as parallel-for loops and distributed arrays. Hands-on exercises will allow attendees to interactively develop parallel programs on desktop machines and then scale these programs to run on the EGEE Grid through gLite middleware.
For more information, please visit: http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceDisplay.py?confId=52563
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09:00
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10:30