ICFA Standing Committee on Interregional Connectivity SCIC

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ICFA Standing Committee on Interregional Connectivity SCIC

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Title: ICFA Standing Committee on Interregional Connectivity SCIC


1
  • ICFA Standing Committee on
    Interregional Connectivity (SCIC)
  • Harvey B. Newman
  • California Institute of TechnologyICFA SCIC
    Meeting, KEKDecember 13, 2002

2
December 13 Agenda (Times JST)
  • 830 Startup Test VRVS Connections
  • 900 Introduction H. Newman
  • 910 Networks in the Asia-Pacific Region (I)
    Y. Karita (Including
    SuperSINET Operation at 10Gbps)
  • 940 Networks in the Asia-Pacific Region (II)
    D. Son
  • 1000 News from SC2002 and Starlight-SNV Test
    Link S. Low HN
  • 1030 BREAK
  • 1045 Brief Technical Progress Reports
    ALL
  • 1145 Presentation of Draft ICFA Reports by WG
    Chairs (30 Each) Status and
    Schedule to Finalize the Reports
  • Monitoring L. Cottrell
  • Advanced Technologies R. Hughes-Jones
  • 1230 LUNCH BREAK
  • 1330 Presentation of the Draft Reports Continues
  • The Digital Divide A. Santoro
  • 1400 Remarks on Overall Report
    H. Newman
  • 1410 Discussion of the Draft Reports
    ALL
  • 1630 AOB Next Meeting
  • 1700 Adjourn

3
ICFA Standing Committee on Interregional
Connectivity (SCIC)
  • Created by ICFA in July 1998 in Vancouver
  • CHARGE
  • Make recommendations to ICFA concerning the
    connectivity between the Americas, Asia and
    Europe
  • As part of the process of developing
    theserecommendations, the committee should
  • Monitor traffic
  • Keep track of technology developments
  • Periodically review forecasts of future
    bandwidth needs, and
  • Provide early warning of potential problems
  • Create subcommittees when necessary to meet the
    charge
  • The chair of the committee should report to ICFA
    once peryear, at its joint meeting with
    laboratory directors

4
Planning for 2/2003 Report to ICFA (9/02)
  • Main Report from Digital Divide
    Sub-Committeealso Reports from Monitoring and
    Advanced Technologies
  • Also Present a Map of HEP Groups/Network
    Connectivity
  • Well Developed Drafts Now (To Christmas)
  • Report Delivered to ICFA January 2003 or
    Beginning of February, in Advance of February
    13-14 Meeting.
  • This Meeting
  • Review Situation in Asia-Pacific Region
  • Discuss Report Drafts

5
Report to ICFASketch of Content (9/02)
  • 10 Page Report with 1 Page Executive Summary
  • Refer to Subcommittee reports on the Web
  • Monitoring Group 10 Pages with Many Pictures
    and Graphs
  • Digital Divide Group 10 Pages of Text, Many
    Pictures, Graphs, Tables 2 illustrations in
    the main report
  • Advanced Technologies Group 10 pages
    references to a lot of technical reports and
    information on the Web.
  • Requirements and Conclusions 5-6 pages
  • Comments on the Computing Model that follow
    from above

6
History - Throughput Quality
Improvements from US
80 annual improvement Factor 100/8 yr
Bandwidth of TCP lt MSS/(RTTSqrt(Loss)) (1)
Progress but Digital Divide is Maintained
(1) Macroscopic Behavior of the TCP Congestion
Avoidance Algorithm, Matthis, Semke, Mahdavi,
Ott, Computer Communication Review 27(3), July
1997
7
TAN WG (HN, L. Price). Note that BW Req.
for 2005 Likely to Change

Installed BW. Maximum Link Occupancy 50
Assumed See http//gate.hep.anl.gov/lprice/TAN
8
HENP Major Links BW Roadmap in Gbps (HBN)
Shown at ICHEP2002
9
HENP Lambda GridsFibers for Physics
  • Problem Extract Small Data Subsets of 1 to 100
    Terabytes from 1 to 1000 Petabyte Data Stores
  • Survivability of the HENP Global Grid System,
    with hundreds of such transactions per day
    (circa 2007)requires that each transaction be
    completed in a relatively short time.
  • Example Take 800 secs to complete the
    transaction. Then
  • Transaction Size (TB) Net Throughput
    (Gbps) 1
    10
  • 10
    100
  • 100
    1000 (Capacity of
    Fiber
    Today)
  • Summary Providing Switching of 10 Gbps
    wavelengthswithin 3 years and Terabit
    Switching within 5-7 yearswould enable
    Petascale Grids with Terabyte transactions,as
    required to fully realize the discovery potential
    of major HENP programs, as well as other
    data-intensive fields.

10
The Digital Divide Perspectives
  • Categorize Nature of the Problem Case Studies,
    Identify Barriers
  • Lack of Infrastructure
  • Political Barriers Policies on International
    Communications Problems at the
    City/State/National Interface
  • Cost
  • Performance The last 0.1,1,10 mile problem
  • Case Studies
  • China, Brazil (Rio) Spain (Madrid) Germany
    (Karlsruhe) Romania Slovakia,
    India, Pakistan, others
  • Success Examples
  • AMPATH Virtual Silk Road (to Central FSU) KEK
    and South East Asia
  • Demographics where are the HEP Institutes How
    many physicists what is their bandwidth
    bottleneck
  • Terena Compendium
  • Demographic plots
  • Questionnaire
  • How ones network capabilities affect the
    ability to Do Science
  • Approaches to a Solution Particular Common
    Characteristics
  • Focus on Ways ICFA Help and how ICFA-SCIC Can
    Help

11
NREN Core Network Size (Mbps-km)http//www.teren
a.nl/compendium/2002
100M
Logarithmic Scale
Leading
Nl
10M
Fi
Cz
Advanced
Hu
Es
1M
Ch
In Transition
It
Pl
Gr
100k
Ir
Lagging
10k
Ro
1k
Ukr
100
12
GEANT 155Mbps
Romania 155 Mbps to GEANT and BucharestInter-Ci
ty Links of 2-6 Mbps
Annual Cost gt 1 MEuro
Progress in 2003 6 to 34 Mbpson Two Links
13
What ICFA and ICFA/SCIC Can Do
  • Identify and highlight specific needs (to Work
    On)
  • Policy problems
  • Last Mile problems
  • Make direct contacts, arrange discussions with
    govt officials
  • ICFA SCIC is prepared to participate
  • Help Start or Get Support for Workshops on
    Networks and Grids
  • Discuss create opportunities
  • Start collaborations on a small scale then grow
  • Seek to form funded programs
  • Start Joint programs such as in DESYs Silk
    project Japanese links to Russia and China
    AMPATH to So. America
  • LIS Proposal EU to South America
  • Pakistan to CERN link being upgraded to
    512kbits/s
  • Initial contact with Romania, to follow up
  • Help form Regional support training groups
    (requires funding)

14
Digital Divide Activities
  • Questionnaire Distributed
  • Plan on Project to Build HENP World Network
    Map Updated and Maintained on a Web Site,
    Backed by Database
  • Systematize and Track Needs and Status
  • Information Link Bandwidths, Utilization,
    Quality, Pricing, Local Infrastructure, Last
    Mile Problems, Vendors, etc.
  • Identify Urgent Cases Focus on Opportunities to
    Help
  • First ICFA SCIC Workshop Focus on the Digital
    Divide
  • Target Date February 2004 in Rio de Janeiro
    (LISHEP)
  • Organization Meeting July 2003
  • Plan Statement at the WSIS, Geneva (December
    2003)
  • Install and Leave Behind a Good Network
  • Then 1 (to 2) Workshops Per Year, at Sites that
    Need Help
  • Contacts with IEEAF

15
(No Transcript)
16
Global Medical Research Exchange
Initiative Bio-Medicine and Health
Sciences
Global Quilt Initiative GMRE Initiative - 001
Propose Global Research and Education Network for
Physics
17
Digital Divide Discussion
  • Sent Questionnaire to LHC Experiments and HEP Lab
    Directors
  • World Map to fill in set up to fill information
    from one city to another. Also add HEP
    Institutes to the Map.
  • Some of this already done by IEEAF
  • Phased Implementation
  • Phase 1 Analysis and Limited Implementation
    then Review
  • Phase 2 Full Implementation
  • Phase 3 Maintenance
  • Build Web Pages
  • Define purpose, project description and goals
  • Investigate, gather information
  • Need utilization as well as Bandwidth
  • Find resources maps and information (e.g. USGS)
  • Build database keep it up to date
  • Build tools for querying and for entering
    information onto the maps
  • Responsibility in Americas HNAlbertoHeidi
    Europe ?Try TERENA
  • then Maintenance among the Labs e.g. CERN,
    Fermilab, SLAC
  • Connection to other tools PINGER MONALISA
    Monitoring System

18
Digital Divide Discussion (2)
  • Web pages for experiences in solving last mile
    problems, local infrastructure, last mile (fiber
    IRU) pricing, vendor contacts
  • Systematize, Classify Regions, Countries,
    Institutes
  • Dead or Nearly Disconnected Regions
  • Hot Spots Use of Existing Capacity to gt 50
  • Moderate
  • Advanced
  • (Grouping by Regions and/or Countries is related
    to the Monitoring Group)
  • Doing this is connected to filling in the World
    Map with HEP Institutes
  • Begin relationship with IEEAF ?
  • Then New Classification also vendors who donated
    something
  • Level3, Tyco, GX Cisco, Juniper, Etc. IBM,
    Microsoft (?), Gelato
  • Define Conditions Sponsor Plateaus
  • Review applications by our committee
  • Try to arrange special discounts/allowances for
    less favored countries or regions
  • Attractive Web Page with LogosList and describe
    joint research projects.

19
DD Discussion (3) Workshop
  • ICFA SCIC Workshop Planning the first Workshop
  • Focus on the Digital Divide
  • Go to the Region that needs it have a
    well-defined goal for an institute or group of
    institutes (network upgrade see below)
  • Need a local organizer (organizing committee)
  • Arrange a sponsor
  • Possible sponsors, one or more of UNESCO, IAEA,
    NATO or Foundations Companies or individual
    donors.
  • Install a good network and leave it running
  • Ensure funding for maintenance etc.
  • Leave tools for networks and collaboration
    Monitoring, VRVS, etc.
  • Get Project Leader(s) also fund raising e.g.
    H.A.
  • Target Date February 2004 Rio de Janeiro,
    LISHEP. Organization meeting Early July 2003
    Invite potential sponsors, agencies
  • 100-150 people
  • NOTE Statement and press release at WSIS
    (Geneva) December 2003.
  • Thinking of doing this meeting 2 times per year
    after the first one
  • Requires a team for 2 months of planning then
    followup
  • Team of 2-3 people 1 to 1.5 FTE travel funds
    etc.

20
Digital Divide Committee
21
(No Transcript)
22
RNP Brazil (to 20 Mbps)
FIU Miami from So. America (to 80 Mbps)
Note Auger (AG), ALMA (Chile), CMS-Tier1 (Brazil)
23
Digital Divide Sub-Committee Questionnaire
Response Extract
24
Cultivate and promote practical solutions to
delivering scalable, universally available and
equitable access to suitable bandwidth and
necessary network resources in support of
research and education collaborations.
Groningen Carrier Hotel March 2002
http//www.ieeaf.org
25
CA-Tokyo by 1/03
NY-AMS 9/02
(Research)
26
The Rapid Pace of Network Technology Advances
Continues
  • Within the Next One to Two Years
  • 10 Gbps Ethernet on Switches and Servers
    LAN/WAN integration at 10 Gbps
  • Intel 10 GbE server NICs in Beta Test
  • 40 Gbps Wavelengths Being Shown
  • NextGen Routers 100 Mpps forwarding engines, 4
    and More 10 Gbps ports per Slot Terabit/sec
    backplanes etc.
  • Broadband Wireless Multiple 3G/4G
    alternatives the drive to defeat the last mile
    problem
  • 802.11 ab, UWB Mobile CDMA2000/1xEV-DO

27
Workshops on HENP Grids and Networks
  • Feb. 2002 Grid and Network Session Brazil
    (Rio)
  • April 2002 Potential of Grids and IT Romania
    (Bucharest)
  • May 2002 Internet2 Members Plenary USA
    (Wash. DC)
  • June 2002 INET2002 (ISOC) USA (Wash.
    DC)
  • June 2002 TERENA Annual Meeting Limerick
  • Sept. 2002 iGrid2002
  • Oct. 2002 ICFA Seminar CERN (Geneva)
  • Nov. 2002 Pan-European Ministerial Romania
    (Bucharest) Pre-Conference for the WSIS
  • Nov. 2002 SC2002
  • March 2003 CHEP2003 USA (San Diego)
  • Lepton-Photon 2003 FNAL (Batavia)
  • 2003 GGF TBD
  • 2003 World Summit on the Geneva
    Information Society (WSIS)

28
WSIS-RO Bucharest Nov. 7-9WSIS is 12/03 05
(Geneva Tunis)
  • The Regional Ministerial Conference, based on the
    UN/ECE membership, is in preparation of the World
    Summit on the Information Society - Bucharest,
    7-9 November 2002
  • The UN General Assembly adopted in 2001 a
    resolution endorsing the organization of the
    World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS),
    to be convened under the patronage of the United
    Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, with the
    International Telecommunication Union taking the
    lead role in its preparation along with
    interested UN organizations and the host
    countries. The Summit will offer a unique
    opportunity for the world community to discuss
    and give shape to the Information Society by
    bringing together governments, international
    organizations, private sector and civil society.
    In preparation for this Summit regional
    conferences are organized to develop specific
    proposals.

29
WSIS-RO Bucharest Nov. 7-9WSIS is 12/03 05
(Geneva Tunis)
  • The Pan-European Ministerial Conference in
    Bucharest will focus on concrete issues of
    relevance for the region, but will keep the
    balance between regional specificity and the
    global dimension.
  • The Conference in Bucharest aims at strengthening
    the relations of cooperation between the
    participating states with a view to adopting a
    common action plan in the field of communications
    and information technology.
  • It will be an opportunity for presenting national
    strategies, achievements and challenges that will
    help the participants to have an accurate view of
    the stage in the transition process to an
    Information Society as well as an opportunity to
    develop a platform for dialogue that includes all
    major stakeholders at European level
    Governments, civil society, private sector and
    international agencies.

30
WSIS-RO Role of New Technologies in Developing
the Information Society
  • Tony Hey, UK Core E-Science Program
  • Peter Zangli, European Commission
  • Hans Hoffmann, CERN Scientific and TT Director
  • Fabrizio Gagliardi EDG Project Leader
  • William Johnston, Lawrence Berkeley Lab
  • HN for Dave Reese Tom West, CENIC, and Natl
    Light Rail
  • Don Riley, IEEAF
  • Harvey Newman, Caltech
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