Title: Grid Computing and the Role of NeSC
1 Grid Computing and the Role of NeSC Prof
Richard Sinnott Technical Director National
e-Science Centre r.sinnott_at_nesc.gla.ac.uk
26th October 2006
2Purpose of Today
- To provide Stirling folk with
- Broad overview of Grids
- Flavour of different kinds of e-Research possible
- Explain the role of NeSC
- What we have done, what we are doing, and plans
for the future - What resources we have at our disposal
- Why?
- NeSC-III continuation grant
- Grids are successful when widely adopted
- User communities essential need to be more
altruistic - Avoid the me-science culture
- Im not that nice a guy, I see this as the
possibility to tap into whole new areas of
collaboration with Stirling University - Aquaculture, environmental sciences,
3e-Science and the Grid
e
-
Science is about global collaboration in key
areas of science, and the next generation of
infrastructure that will enable it.
e
-
Science will change the dynamic of the
way science is undertaken.
John Taylor
Director General of Research Councils
Office of Science and Technology
- Grid is infrastructure used for e-Science
- Metaphor of Power Grid compute and data
resources - on demand
4Foundation for e-Science
- e-Science methodologies transforming science,
engineering, medicine and business - driven by exponential growth in data, compute
demands - enabling a whole-system approach
computers
software
Grid
sensor nets
instruments
Shared data archives
colleagues
5Data Grids for High Energy Physics
PBytes/sec
100 MBytes/sec
Offline Processor Farm 20 TIPS
There is a bunch crossing every 25 nsecs. There
are 100 triggers per second Each triggered
event is 1 MByte in size
100 MBytes/sec
Tier 0
CERN Computer Centre
622 Mbits/sec
Tier 1
FermiLab 4 TIPS
France Regional Centre
Italy Regional Centre
Germany Regional Centre
622 Mbits/sec
Tier 2
622 Mbits/sec
Institute 0.25TIPS
Institute
Institute
Institute
Physics data cache
1 MBytes/sec
Tier 4
Physicist workstations
6The e-Health Future
Tissues
Cell
Protein functions
Organs
Protein Structures
Organisms
Gene expressions
Physiology
Populations
Nucleotide structures
Cell signalling
Nucleotide sequences
Protein-protein interaction (pathways)
7Next Generation Transistor Design
3D Statistical
8UK e-Science Budget (2001-2006)
Total 213M
100M via JISC
Staff costs - Grid Resources Computers
Network funded separately
Source Science Budget 2003/4 2005/6, DTI(OST)
Slide from Steve Newhouse
9e-Science in the UK
e-Science Institute
NationalCentre fore-SocialScience
Core NGS Nodes HPCx CSAR
Grid Operations Support Centre
NERCe-ScienceCentre
National Institute for Environmentale-Science
CeSC (Cambridge)
OMII-UK
OMII-UK
OMII-UK
10NeSC Mission Statement
- To stimulate and sustain the development of
e-Science in the UK, to contribute significantly
to its international development and to ensure
that its techniques are rapidly propagated to
commerce and industry. - To identify and support e-Science projects within
and between institutions in Scotland, and to
provide the appropriate technical infrastructure
and support in order to ensure rapid uptake of
e-Science techniques by Scottish scientists. - To encourage the interaction and bi-directional
flow of ideas between computing science research
and e-Science applications - To develop advances in scientific data curation
and analysis and to be a primary source of top
quality systems and repositories that enable
management, sharing and best use of research data.
11NeSC Continuation Grant
- One of the few to be offered continued funding
- Runs from August 2006 end July 2008
- PI is Prof. Peter Clarke
- However - limited resources
- 0.25 FTE Prof. R. Sinnott - Technical Director
- 0.25 FTE Dr D. Berry - Project Manager
- 0.5 FTE Susan Andrews - Web Database Developer
- 0.33 FTE Iain Coleman - technical writer/ content
editor - 0.5 FTE Chris Bayliss - Software Engineer
- 1 FTE event team staff
- 0.5 FTE computing staff
- 0.25 FTE administrative support staff
- Total 3.5FTE (over 2 sites)
12NeSC-3 Plans
- 1. National leadership and coordination, and
International Representation - National and International Activities including
OGF and JISC e-Infrastructure - Knowledge base for UK e-Science web site
- Plan for 6 key community events per annum
- Outreach through other events
- AHM Support
- e-Science centre directors meetings
- Host international delegations.
- home for GridNet
13NeSC-3 Plans ctd
- 2. Promote research excellence based upon
existing and newly developing areas of strength - Scientific Data Exploitation
- High-performance networking
- Bioinformatics
- Clinical Sciences
- Electronic Engineering
- Security
- Emergency Response Computation Dynamics
- BioMedical Image Analysis
14NeSC-3 Plans ctd
- 3. Inform/contribute to development of national
e-Infrastructure and international standards - Technical Development
- ETF, STF, ATF and GOSC
- Middleware OGSA-DAI/DAIT, eDIKT2
- Security expertise
- Standards such as GGF/OGF
- Infrastructure
- Scottish e-Infrastructure (more soon)
- AccessGrid
- Working closely with EUCS and GUCS
15NeSC-3 Plans ctd
- 4. E-Science outreach and uptake in the Regional
community - plan for 3 events per year to foster uptake of
e-Science in the Scottish Region - You are the first!!!!
- Next one in Aberdeen 13th December
- organise workshops and seminars at various
Scottish institutions on a variety of application
domains of regional interest - fostering inter-institute projects
- SBRN, GS SFHS, GEODE, nanoCMOS,
16NeSC-3 Plans ctd
- 5. Stimulate e-Science Education
- Grid Computing module in advanced MSc at
Department Computing Science in Glasgow - E-Science MSc in Edinburgh
- EGEE Training Team in Edinburgh
- Involved in National Grid Service training
courses - Various summer schools
17Glasgow e-Science Hub
- E-Science Hub
- Externally
- Glasgow end of NeSC
- Involved in UK wide activities
- Involved in numerous projects (more later!)
- Public visibility of NeSC
- responsible for NeSC web site (www.nesc.ac.uk)
- Internally
- Focal point for e-Science research/activities at
Glasgow - Work closely with foundation departments
- Department of Computing Science
- Department of Physics Astronomy
- Also working with other groups including
- Bioinformatics Research Centre, Biostatistics
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering
- Clinicians, Hospitals, across Scotland,
- Arts Humanities, University Services
- NeSC GU now part of University Services!
J. Jiang
Chris Bayliss
A. Ajayi
Campbell Millar Nano CMOS PC
Mohd Noor (PhD)
Gordon Stewart
18In the beginning at Glasgow
- Consolidation of resources
- Story started with building around ScotGrid
- Providing shared Grid resource for wide
- variety of scientists inside/outside Glasgow
- HEP, CS, BRC, EEE,
- Target shares established
- Non-contributing groups encouraged
- ScotGrid Disk 15TB
- CPU 255 1GHz
- Hardware
- 59 IBM X Series 330 dual 1 GHz Pentium III with
2GB memory - 2 IBM X Series 340 dual 1 GHz Pentium III with
2GB memory - 3 IBM X Series 340 dual 1 GHz Pentium III with
2GB memory - and 100 1000 Mbit/s ethernet
- 1TB disk
- LTO/Ultrium Tape Library
- Cisco ethernet switches
- And then came
- IBM X Series 370 PIII Xeon with 32 x 512 MB RAM
- 5TB FastT500 disk 70 x 73.4 GB IBM FC Hot-Swap
HDD - eDIKT 28 IBM blades dual 2.4 GHz Xeon with 1.5GB
memory - eDIKT 6 IBM X Series 335 dual 2.4 GHz Xeon with
1.5GB memory - CDF 10 Dell PowerEdge 2650 2.4 GHz Xeon with
1.5GB memory - CDF 7.5TB Raid disk
- 2.81 million CPU hours completed
- Compare Sun 1 CPU/hr
- 313,500 jobs completed
- Stats on usage available to user groups
19Glasgow e-Science Infrastructure ctd
- Now includes
- Computer Services second HPC facility (128
Opteron based) - University SAN (50TB 25TB mirrored across
campus) - 850k investment
- SMP donations to NeSC Glasgow
- Access to campus wide resources
- Campus wide Condor provisionally oked
- EEE compute clusters and larger SMP machines
- others
- Scottish Bioinformatics Research Network
equipment funds (80k) - BBSRC REI equipment grant success (120k)
- Connection to UKLight network (up to 10Gbit/s)
- (ask Pete for more details on UK Light)
- Use of National Grid Service
20ScotGrid Infrastructure Now
- 800k of SRIF-3 funding
- Glasgow investment builds on SRIF-1/SRIF-2
funding, ScotGrid and eDIKT projects - Clustervision cluster now procured
- installation well advanced
- consists of 140 dual core, dual CPU Opteron
worker nodes - provides more than 1 million SI2K
- 100TB raw disk
- In process of becoming affiliate of the NGS
- 10 made available for NGS
21Similar Story in Edinburgh
- Created the Advanced Computing Facility
- secure site outside Edinburgh
- contains 155TB SAN and HPC servers
- initial investment 3.8M
- Further 2M SRIF-3 investment on-going for new
compute cluster - These investments and Glasgows laying
foundations for Scottish Grid Service
22Scottish Grid Service
- Case is currently being formulated
- Initial proposal outline agreed by SE as
strategically important for Scotland - Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow (lead),
Heriot-Watt, Strathclyde, Stirling (Ken), St
Andrews, - Abertay, Highlands Islands,
- Be inclusive!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Offer more than Grid computing resources
- Move towards service based infrastructure
- Key application areas
- High energy physics, life sciences and
bioinformatics, electronics, computing science, - Arts humanities, social sciences, other things
of relevance/importance for Scotland - Cant support everyone, so will likely need to
cherry-pick
23Finally
- Lots of opportunities in this space
- In the last 2 years I have personally been
involved in 48 funding proposals (more in a
bit!!!) - (18 funded, 6 being reviewed, 8 in progress,
dont mention the rest!) - We are happy to provide training
- Offer lectures/seminars on Grids/e-Science here
at Stirling? - Follow up workshop here?
- Organise events through e-Science Institute
- Themes, workshops,
- What are Stirling interested in?
- Best place to learn more is NeSC web site
- Primary source of information on UK e-Science
- What projects, what is happening in what areas,