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

The CMS event-builder system for LHC run 3 (2021-23)

12 Jul 2018, 11:30
15m
Hall 3.1 (National Palace of Culture)

Hall 3.1

National Palace of Culture

presentation Track 1 - Online computing T1 - Online computing

Speaker

Remi Mommsen (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))

Description

The data acquisition system (DAQ) of the CMS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) assembles events of 2 MB at a rate of 100 kHz. The event builder collects event fragments from about 740 sources and assembles them into complete events which are then handed to the high-level trigger (HLT) processes running on O(1000) computers. The aging event-building hardware will be replaced during the long shutdown 2 of the LHC taking place in 2019/20. The future data networks will be based on 100 Gb/s interconnects using Ethernet and Infiniband technologies. More powerful computers may allow to combine the currently separate functionality of the readout and builder units into a single I/O processor handling simultaneously 100 Gb/s of input and output traffic. It might be beneficial to preprocess data originating from specific detector parts or regions before handling it to generic HLT processors. Therefore, we will investigate how specialized coprocessors, e.g. GPUs, could be integrated into the event builder. We will present the envisioned changes to the event-builder compared to today's system. Initial measurements of the performance of the data networks under the event-building traffic pattern will be shown. Implications of a folded network architecture for the event building and corresponding changes to the software implementation will be discussed.

Primary authors

Jean-Marc Andre (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Ulf Behrens (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)) James Gordon Branson (Univ. of California San Diego (US)) Philipp Brummer (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE)) 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) Andre Georg Holzner (Univ. of California San Diego (US)) Michael Lettrich (Technische Universität Muenchen (DE)) Audrius Mecionis (Vilnius University (LT)) 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) Valdas Rapsevicius (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Thomas Reis (CERN) Hannes Sakulin (CERN) Christoph Schwick (CERN) Dainius Simelevicius (Vilnius University (LT)) Mantas Stankevicius (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)) Cristina Vazquez Velez (CERN) Christian Wernet (University of Applied Sciences (DE)) Petr Zejdl (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))

Presentation materials