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1-1.1 Sample Grid Computing Projects. NSF Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) 2004 – to date‏ Transform our ability to carry out research.

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Presentation on theme: "1-1.1 Sample Grid Computing Projects. NSF Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) 2004 – to date‏ Transform our ability to carry out research."— Presentation transcript:

1 1-1.1 Sample Grid Computing Projects

2 NSF Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) 2004 – to date‏ Transform our ability to carry out research vital to reducing vulnerability to catastrophic earthquakes from I. Foster Environment/Earth

3 SURA Coastal Ocean Observing and Prediction Program (SCOOP) http://scoop.sura.org/

4 https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/ Medicine

5 Biomedical Informatics Research Network (BIRN) http://www.birncommunity.org/

6 http://amp.ucar.edu/ neuGRID project ended Jan. 31st 2011.

7 1-1.7 Large Hadron Collider experimental facility for complex particle experiments at CERN (European Center for Nuclear Research, near Geneva Switzerland). Physics CERN LCH Computing grid (LCG)‏ Started in 2002. Now operational.

8 1-1.8 http://public.web.cern.ch/public/en/LHC/LHC-en.html

9 http://lcg.web.cern.ch/LCG/public/

10 http://www.es.net/

11 http://weathermap.es.net/index-flex.html

12 1-1.12 Grid computing infrastructure projects Not tied to one specific application

13 1-1.13 Funded by NSF in 2001 initially to link five supercomputer centers. Hubs established at Chicago and Los Angeles. Five centers connected to one hub: Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) (Chicago hub)‏ National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) (Chicago hub)‏ Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) (Chicago hub)‏ San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) ( LA hub)‏ Caltech (LA hub)‏ National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) (Chicago hub)‏ TeraGrid

14 1-1.14 Hubs at Chicago and Los Angeles Interconnected using 40 Gigabit/sec optical backplane network. Five centers Connected to one hub using 30 Gigabit/sec connections State-of-the-art optical lines could reach 10 Gigabit/sec in the early 2000s Four lines used to achieve 40 Gigabit/sec. Three lines used to achieve 30 Gigabit/sec

15 1-1.15 TeraGrid circa 2004

16 1-1.16 TeraGrid as of 2008

17 eXtreme Digital (XD) National Science Foundation’s new Cyberinfrastructure program which will replace and expand upon the existing TeraGrid program. Started in summer 2011.

18 https://portal.teragrid.org/

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25 http://amp.ucar.edu/

26 http://dasilveira.cems.umn.edu:8080/gridsphere/gridsphere

27 https://www.gridchem.org/

28 http://www.phylo.org/portal2/login!input.action

29 http://desktop2petascale.org/

30 https://www.nbcr.net:8443/worksphere/start/

31 http://www.earthsystemgrid.org/home.htm

32 http://www.earthsystemgrid.org/about/overview.htm

33 Open Science Grid (OSG) Started around 2005, received $30 million funding from NSF and DOE in 2006: Boston University Brookhaven National Laboratory California Institute of Technology Columbia University Cornell University Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Indiana University Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1-1.33 Stanford Linear Accelerator Center University of California, San Diego University of Chicago University of Florida University of Iowa University of North Carolina/RENCI University of Wisconsin- Madison

34 http://www.opensciencegrid.org/

35 SURAGrid as of 2011 Southeastern Universities Research Association 1-1.35 Fig. 1.4

36 http://sgportal.cct.lsu.edu:8080/gridsphere/gridsphere

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39 http://www.nersc.gov/users/software/grid/ National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center

40 1-1.40 National Grids Many countries embraced Grid computing in early-mid 2000’s and set-up Grid computing infrastructures: D-Grid, Germany DutchGrid, Netherlands Grid–Ireland, Ireland Hungrid, Hungary National Grid Service, UK Norgrid, Norway SweGrid, Sweden TNGC, Thai National Grid Center TWGrid, Taiwan etc, …

41 1-1.41 UK e-Science Grid Early 2000’s

42 UK National Grid Service Follow-up from UK e-Science Grid Founded in 2004 to provide distributed access to computational and database resources, with four core sites: – Universities of Manchester, Oxford and Leeds, and Rutherford Appleton Laboratory By 2008, it had grown to 16 sites. Access free to any academic with a legitimate need. 1-1.42

43 http://www.ngs.ac.uk/ National Grid Service

44 Multi-national Grids 2000-2005, several efforts to create Grids that spanned across many countries. 1-1.44

45 http://www.egi.eu/projects/egi-inspire/

46 http://www.egi.eu/export/sites/egi/about/press/EGI-InSPIRE-FactSheet-2010.pdf EGI-InSPIRE Framework Programme 7 (2007-2013) Research infrastructures project. In addition to over 40 partners located within Europe, EGI-InSPIRE includes 8 unfunded partners from Asia Pacific region.

47 http://www.euindiagrid.eu/index.php/about

48 DEISA (Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications) DEISA-1 project from 2004 - 2008. DEISA-2 started in 2008, to extend to 2011 Still active 1a.48

49 http://www.eu-eela.eu/ Europe and Latin America

50 http://www.gisela-grid.eu/

51 http://latinamericangrid.org/index.php

52 Vision of a single universal international Grid such as the Internet/World Wide Web May never be achieved though. More likely - Grids will connect to other Grids but will maintain their identity. 1a.52


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