9–13 Jul 2018
Sofia, Bulgaria
Europe/Sofia timezone

Presentation layer of CMS Online Monitoring System

12 Jul 2018, 14:30
15m
Hall 3.1 (National Palace of Culture)

Hall 3.1

National Palace of Culture

presentation Track 1 - Online computing T1 - Online computing

Speaker

Mantas Stankevicius (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))

Description

The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is one of the experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The CMS Online Monitoring system (OMS) is an upgrade and successor to the CMS Web-Based Monitoring (WBM) system, which is an essential tool for shift crew members, detector subsystem experts, operations coordinators, and those performing physics analyses. CMS OMS is divided into aggregation and presentation layers. Communication between layers uses RESTful JSON:API compliant requests. The aggregation layer is responsible for collecting data from heterogeneous sources, storage of transformed and pre-calculated (aggregated) values and exposure of data via the RESTful API.

The presentation layer displays detector information via a modern, user-friendly and customizable web interface. The CMS OMS user interface is composed of a set of cutting-edge software frameworks and tools to display non-event data to any authenticated CMS user worldwide. The web interface tree-like component structure comprises (top-down): workspaces, folders, pages, controllers and portlets. A clear hierarchy gives the required flexibility and control for content organization. Each bottom element instantiates a portlet and is a reusable component that displays a single aspect of data, like a table, a plot, an article, etc. Pages consist of multiple different portlets and can be customized at run-time by using a drag-and-drop technique. This is how a single page can easily include information from multiple online sources. Different pages give access to a summary of the current status of the experiment, as well as convenient access to historical data.

This paper describes the CMS OMS architecture, core concepts and technologies of the presentation layer.

Primary authors

Mantas Stankevicius (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Valdas Rapsevicius (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Audrius Mecionis (Vilnius University (LT)) Jean-Marc Olivier Andre (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Ulf Behrens (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)) James Gordon Branson (Univ. of California San Diego (US)) Olivier Chaze (CERN) Sergio Cittolin (Univ. of California San Diego (US)) Diego Da Silva Gomes (CERN) Georgiana Lavinia Darlea (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)) Christian Deldicque (CERN) Zeynep Demiragli (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)) Marc Dobson (CERN) Nicolas Doualot (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Samim Erhan (University of California Los Angeles (US)) Jonathan Fulcher (CERN) Dominique Gigi (CERN) Maciej Szymon Gladki (Ministere des affaires etrangeres et europeennes (FR)) Frank Glege (CERN) Guillelmo Gomez Ceballos Retuerto (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)) Jeroen Hegeman (CERN) Michael Lettrich (Technische Universität Muenchen (DE)) Frans Meijers (CERN) Emilio Meschi (CERN) Remi Mommsen (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Srecko Morovic (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Vivian O'Dell Luciano Orsini (CERN) Ioannis Papakrivopoulos (National Technical Univ. of Athens (GR)) Christoph Paus (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)) Andrea Petrucci (Rice University (US)) Marco Pieri (Univ. of California San Diego (US)) Dinyar Rabady (CERN) Attila Racz (CERN) Thomas Reis (CERN) Hannes Sakulin (CERN) Christoph Schwick (CERN) Dainius Simelevicius (Vilnius University (LT)) Cristina Vazquez Velez (CERN) Mr Michail Vougioukas (CERN) Christian Wernet (University of Applied Sciences (DE)) Petr Zejdl (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Andre Georg Holzner (Univ. of California San Diego (US))

Presentation materials