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Building Components for Grid Interoperability

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Building Components for Grid Interoperability. Stephen Brewer, Achim Streit. Alistair Dunlop ... Fujitsu Labs of Europe, KTH, INFN, PSNC, FZJ, U-Edinburgh, CERN) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Components for Grid Interoperability


1
Building Components for Grid Interoperability
  • Stephen Brewer, Achim Streit Alistair Dunlop
  • University of Southampton Forschungszentrum
    Jülich

2
What is OMII-Europe
  • OMII-Europe stands for
  • Open Middleware Infrastructure Institute for
    Europe
  • It involves 16 partners
  • 8 EU (U-Southampton (coord.), Fujitsu Labs of
    Europe, KTH, INFN, PSNC, FZJ, U-Edinburgh, CERN)
  • 4 USA (U-Chicago, NCSA, U-Southern California,
    U-Wisconsin)
  • 4 China (Beihang U, China Institute of Computing
    Technology, Computer Network Information Centre,
    Tsinghua U)

3
Vision Mission
  • Vision
  • e-Science having easy access and use of Grid
    resources in heterogeneous e-infrastructures
    crossing national, pan-European and global
    boundaries
  • Mission
  • Enabling of e-infrastructure interoperability by
    providing standards-based Grid middleware
    components leveraging existing work and
    activities

4
Focus
  • Achieving interoperability through common
    standards
  • Common standards is the long term solution
  • Significant involvement and success in OGF and
    OASIS
  • Implementations of standards in tandem with
    standards development on all middleware platforms

5
Approaches to Interoperability
  • Adapters-based
  • The ability of Grid middleware to interact via
    adapters that translate the specific design
    aspects from one domain to another
  • Standard-based
  • the native ability of Grid middleware to interact
    directly via well-defined interfaces and common
    open standards

definition inspired by OGF GIN CG
6
Who Benefits from Interoperability?
  • Grid Developers
  • A single standard set of services on all Grid
    middleware systems
  • Applications portable across different Grid
    middleware systems
  • e-Science application users
  • Common ways for accessing any e-infrastructure
    resources
  • Potential access to a significantly larger set of
    resources
  • e-resource owners
  • Reduced management overheads as only a single
    Grid middleware system needs deployment
  • Potential for greater resource utilisation
  • For the Grid to deliver on its promises
    interoperability needs to be taken for granted
    like network interoperability

7
The Virtuous Cycle Technology transfer with
Grid projects and standards organisations
Standards Compliance Testing and QA
JRA2
New Components
Standards Implementation
Components
JRA1
IN
Globus
Benchmarking
Repository
OUT
OMII-UK
Components
CROWN
Supported Components on Eval. Infrastructure
Integrated Components
8
OMII-Europe Participation in Standardisation
  • Most project participants involved as
    member/observer in many OGF WG
  • 11 project participant hold senior positions in
  • OGSA DAIS WG (Database Access and Integration
    Services)
  • OGSA RUS WG (Resource Usage Server)
  • OGSA BES WG (Basic Execution Service)
  • OGSA JSDL WG (Job Submission Description
    Language)
  • GRAAP WG (Grid Research Agreement Allocation
    Protocol)
  • OGSA DMI WG (Data Movement Interface)
  • GIN CG (Grid Interoperability Now)
  • OGSA-AuthZ-WG (Authorization)
  • GLUE WG
  • GFSG WG (Grid File System)
  • RM WG (Reference Model)
  • OGSA Naming WG
  • OGSA BYTE IO WG
  • OGSA D WG (Data)

9
What OMII-Europe is doing?
  • Initial focus on providing common interfaces and
    integration of major Grid software
    infrastructures
  • Common interoperable services
  • Database Access
  • Virtual Organisation Management
  • Accounting
  • Job Submission and Job Monitoring
  • Infrastructure integration
  • Initial gLite/UNICORE/Globus interoperability
  • Interoperable security framework
  • Access these infrastructure services through a
    portal

10
Job Submission
  • Unify Job Submission and Monitoring interface
  • Adoption of emerging OGSA-BES and JSDL standards
  • Alpha BES and JSDL implementations for
  • UNICORE 6, gLite 3.1, Globus 4, OMII-UK,
    CROWNgrid
  • Interoperability demonstrated through use of a
    BES compliant meta-scheduler

11
VO Management
  • To provide a common Virtual Organisation (VO)
    management solution across middleware
    distributions
  • Extend VOMS Interface to support emerging AuthZ
    standard
  • compliance with SAML Authorisation model
  • Extension, not a replacement interface
  • Public release of SAML-VOMS integrated with
    UNICORE 6

12
Accounting
  • Unify accounting information across middleware
    distributions
  • Provide standardized interfaces for accessing
    that information
  • Information standard Usage Record Format (UR)
  • Service interface standard Resource Usage
    Service (OGSA-RUS)
  • Alpha versions RUS
  • gLite (DGAS), Globus (SGAS), UNICORE

13
Data Access Portal
  • Data Access
  • Port OGSA-DAI 3.0 from Globus to other middleware
    distributions available throughout Europe and
    China
  • UNICORE, gLite, CROWN
  • Portal
  • Deliver tools for developing Grid portals and
    support for key Web and Grid standards and
    technologies
  • Objectives
  • Develop gateway to OMII Evaluation Infrastructure
  • Develop tools for portal and grid software
    training
  • Explore new approaches for grid portal development

14
Infrastructure Integration
  • Putting all developments together and test them
    in a global scenario (e.g. secure job submission)

15
Repository of Open-Source Software
  • Make available software reengineered within
    OMII-Europe and contributed by third parties
  • Single services/tools complete distributions
  • Provide an interface to select software from the
    repository based on user requirements
  • By capability/standards/provider/
  • Support the upload, download and installation of
    the software
  • Document platform portability pre-requisites
  • Verify the software through compliance metrics
    tests
  • Using the ETICS software

16
New Services Activity
  • To identify capabilities which are missing from
    the OMII-Europe initial plans ? implementation in
    2nd year of the project
  • First Missing Piece a Community-agreed
    Information Model for Computing Resources
  • Lack of a common description of Grid resources
    suitable for discovery, monitoring and scheduling
  • Many descriptions exist, e.g. GLUE Schema,
    NorduGrid Schema
  • Working on the definition of next-generation GLUE
    2 Information Model in the context of OGF GLUE WG
    and its implementation

17
What can you do Now and Later
  • Now
  • Most products at Beta stage becoming publicly
    available
  • They provide basic interoperability of multiple
    grid middleware systems focusing on job execution
  • Available to early adopters working with
    OMII-Europe partners
  • Spring 2008 (end of current project)
  • Further security integration work between
    different middleware platforms (SAML-VOMS, TLS
    (Transport level security))
  • Completed QAd services and demonstrated
    end-to-end solutions
  • Availability of GLUE 2 information model service
    implementations

18
Interoperability Scenario - WISDOM
  • Wide In Silico Docking On Malaria (WISDOM)
  • Developing new drugs for neglected and emerging
    diseases with a particular focus on malaria
  • Accelerated research development and reduce
    costs
  • WISDOM already uses EGEE for large in silico
    docking tests
  • Methods to predict molecule bindings
  • Used software packages AutoDock and FlexXare
    offered via gLite in EGEE
  • Result list of best compounds

19
Interoperability Scenario - WISDOM
  • Refine best compound list using MD (molecular
    dynamics) simulations
  • AMBER software is ideal for this
  • AMBER is a highly scalable code that runs highly
    efficient on close-coupled HPC systems
  • DEISA offers HPC resources
  • AMBER is available through UNICORE
  • How can scientists use both e-infrastructures to
    accelerate drug discovery, although different
    Grid technologies are used in EGEE and DEISA ?

20
slide courtesy of Morris Riedel
21
Summary
  • OMII-Europe establishes Grid infrastructure
    interoperability through implementing common open
    standards in major Grid middleware technologies
  • Implementing a number of components that will
    allow identically specified jobs to be run,
    managed and migrated to different middleware
    platforms
  • Initial versions of BES, VOMS/SAML and security
    service have already enabled UNICORE 6 and gLite
    managed resources to be used by the same job
  • Services can be obtained from the OMII-Europe
    repository
  • We anticipate OMII-Europe services to be
    integrated into standard middleware distributions
    as well as deployed on large scale
    e-infrastructures such as EGEE and DEISA

22
Further Information
  • http//omii-europe.org
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