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Sponsored by the National Science Foundation GENI-enabled Campuses Responsibilities, Requirements, & Coordination Bryan Lyles, NSF Mark Berman & Chip Elliott,

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Presentation on theme: "Sponsored by the National Science Foundation GENI-enabled Campuses Responsibilities, Requirements, & Coordination Bryan Lyles, NSF Mark Berman & Chip Elliott,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation GENI-enabled Campuses Responsibilities, Requirements, & Coordination Bryan Lyles, NSF Mark Berman & Chip Elliott, GPO / BBN

2 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation2January 8, 2013 GENI is building out national-scale infrastructure of a radically new architecture –Sliced / virtualized –Deeply programmable –End-to-end –Fundamentally federated GENI is one aspect of a larger, emerging picture of a major change in nationwide R&E infrastructure –New campus architectures - SDN, Science DMZ,... –Federated SDN-based, scientific cyber-infrastructure –Condo of Condos, XSEDE Recap A major opportunity with very high potential impact for society

3 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation3January 8, 2013 Responsibility of each participating campus in the nationwide effort Identify campus contacts (research faculty and IT staff) who will actively collaborate on innovation, installation, and operations for GENI-enabling Host a GENI rack Deploy OpenFlow switches within campus (At some campuses) Host a GENI WiMAX base station Maintain OpenFlow- and VLAN-based connectivity to GENI via a research network Make compute and network resources available to researchers on and off campus via aggregate manager API A nationwide federation – resources are locally owned, and shared with researchers on and off campus.

4 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation4January 8, 2013 Roles & responsibilities (for discussion) RoleResponsibilities (draft for discussion) Campus CS researchers Investigate new architectures / services, implement them within slices, contribute to infrastructure design Campus science researchers Investigate domain sciences, explore new tools and architectures that best support their research needs Campus IT staffActively participate in building GENI. Own & operate local campus portion of the federated infrastructure, make it available for use by researchers across the United States, publish enough management info to GMOC so that end-to-end debugging works R&E Network Operators Provide nationwide sliced, deeply programmable connectivity, support experimentation and roll-out of novel services across US GENI Meta- Operations Center Coordinate end-to-end management, incident escalation, emergency shut down, etc. IndustryPartner with campuses via donations and joint projects in order to understand issues related to commercialization of new infrastructure, architectures, services National Science Foundation Encourage national-scale perspective, provide funding as needed

5 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation5January 8, 2013 Next steps needed Initial deployments, Individual shakedowns, getting ready Equipment going live, end-to-end Trial operations add more campuses Revise /extend architecture as needed Winter / spring 2013 Late spring 2013 ? Summer 2013 onwards “First wave” “Ramping up”

6 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation6January 8, 2013 Key challenges ahead Document campus architecture(s) that support GENI / domain science based on hands-on experience and lessons learned in the early days Thrash out best practices for end-to-end trouble- shooting in large-scale, federated infrastructure Agree upon GENI governance structures as needed, including global / local policies and cost- recovery model(s)

7 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation7January 8, 2013 How shall we organize ourselves? Challenge #1 – Document campus architecture(s) that support GENI / domain science based on hands-on experience and lessons learned in the early days Suggestions for volunteers... –Members of GENI architecture team –2-3 “First wave” campus volunteers –1 or more national / regional R&E networks –Active participation from CISE / OCI –GPO will help Suggested logistics... –Regular phone calls, face to face meetings (at GECs?) –Wiki on geni.net

8 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation8January 8, 2013 Organizing ourselves, cont’d Challenge #2 – Thrash out best practices for end- to-end trouble-shooting in large-scale, federated infrastructure Suggestions for volunteers... –GENI GMOC team (Indiana University) –2-3 “First wave” campus volunteers –1 or more national / regional R&E networks –GPO will help

9 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation9January 8, 2013 Organizing ourselves, cont’d Challenge #3 – Agree upon GENI governance structures as needed, including global / local policies and cost-recovery model(s) Suggestions for volunteers... –Senior computer science researchers –2-3 campus CIOs, whether first wave or later –1 or more national / regional R&E networks –Active participation from CISE / OCI –GPO will help

10 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation10January 8, 2013 Discussion What are your thoughts on … –Other major challenges –Timeline / scheduling issues –Equipment / vendor issues –How we should organize ourselves What key areas are being totally overlooked? Are there areas in which additional near-term efforts could greatly reduce risk?

11 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation11January 8, 2013 Thank you! As a group, we are now poised at the start of something radically new... –... with potentially very high impact for the world Of course there are many uncertainties – the map has not yet been drawn Let’s go for it!


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