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CLRC-RAL Site Report

The CLRC RAL Tier A Centre is a new UK supercomputer facility that also serves as the BaBar Tier A Centre. It features state-of-the-art hardware, including dual CPU PCs, a disk farm with 40TB storage capacity, and a tape robot. The centre offers high-performance computing capabilities and is a collaboration between CLRC Daresbury Laboratory, Edinburgh EPCC, and IBM.

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CLRC-RAL Site Report

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  1. CLRC-RAL Site Report John Gordon CLRC eScience Centre HEPiX FNAL

  2. General PP Facilities • New UK Supercomputer • BaBar TierA Centre • Networking

  3. Prototype Tier 1 centre for CERN LHC and FNAL experiments Tier A centre for SLAC BaBar experiment Testbed for EU DataGrid project UK GridPP Tier1/A Centre at CLRC Computing Farm This years new hardware consists of 4 racks holding 156 dual cpu PCs, a total of 312 1.4GHz Pentium III Tualatin cpus. Each box has 1GB of memory, a 40GB internal disk and 100Mb ethernet. 40TByte disk-based Disk Farm The new mass storage unit can store 40Tb or raw data after a RAID 5 overhead. The PCs are clustered on network switches with up to 8x1000Mbit ethernet out of each rack. Inside The Tape Robot The tape robot was upgraded last year and now uses 60GB STK 9940 tapes. It currently holds 45TB but could hold 330TB when full.

  4. Free Free and out of robot 36TB HEP Data

  5. HPCx • UK SuperComputer for next 6 years • Collaboration of CLRC Daresbury Laboratory, Edinburgh EPCC. IBM • Sited at CLRC-DL • http://www.hpcx.ac.uk • Double in performance every 2 years ie 2 upgrades • Capability computing • Target to get 50% of the jobs using 50% of the machine • Hardware • 40x32 IBM pSeries 690 Regatta-H nodes (Power4 CPUs) • 1280 1.3GHz cpus – estimated peak performance 6.6TeraFLOPS • IBM Colony switch connects blocks of 8 cpus (ie looks like 160x8, not 40x32) • 1280 GB of Memory • 2x32 already in place as a migration aid. • Service testing mid November, service December.

  6. HPCx • Software • Capability computing on around 1000 high performance CPUs • Terascale Applications team • Parallelising applications for 1000’s of CPUs • Different architecture compared to T3E etc • HPCx is a cluster of 32 Processor machines compared to MPP style of T3E • Some MPI operations now very slow (eg barriers, all-to-all communications)

  7. RAL Tier A • RAL is TierA Centre for BaBar • Like CC-IN2P3 but concentrating on different data. • Shared resource with LHC and other experiments • Use

  8. Hardware • 104 “noma”-like machines allocated to BaBar • 156+old farm shared with other experiments • 6 BaBar Suns (4-6 CPUs each) • 20 TB disk for BaBar • Also using ~10 TB of pool disk for data transfers • All disk servers on Gigabit ethernet • Pretty good server performance • … as well as existing RAL facilities • 622 Mbits/s network to SLAC and elsewhere • AFS cell • 100TB Tape robot • Many years’ experience running BaBar software

  9. Problems • Disk problems tracked down to a bad batch of drives • All drives are now being replaced by the manufacturer • our disks should be done in ~1 month • By using spare servers, replacement shouldn’t interrupt service • Initially suffered from lack of support staff and out-of-hours support (for US hours) • Two new system managers now in post • Two more being recruited (one just for BaBar) • Additional staff have been able to help with problems at weekends • Discussing more formal arrangements

  10. RAL Batch CPU Use

  11. RAL Batch Users(running at least one non-trivial job each week) A total of 113 new BaBar users registered since December

  12. Data at RAL • All data in Kanga format is at RAL • 19 TB currently on disk • Series-8 + series-10 + reskimmed series-10 • AllEvents + streams • data + signal+generic MC • New data copied from SLAC within 1-2 days • RAL is now the primary Kanga analysis site • New data is archived to tape at SLAC and then deleted from disk

  13. Changes since July • Two new RedHat 6 front-end machines • Dedicated to BaBar use • Login to babar.gridpp.rl.ac.uk • Trial RedHat 7.2 service • One front-end and (currently) 5 batch workers • Once we are happy with the configuration, many/all of the rest of the batch workers will be rapidly upgraded • ssh AFS token passing installed on front-ends • So, your local (eg. SLAC) token is available when you log in • Trial Grid Gatekeeper available (EDG 1.2) • Allows job submission from the Grid • Improved new user registration procedures

  14. Plans • Upgrade full farm to RedHat 7.2 • Leave RedHat 6 front-end for use with older releases • Upgrade Suns to Solaris 8 and integrate into PBS queues • Install data dedicated import-export machines • Fast (Gigabit) network connection • Special firewall rules to allow scp, bbftp, bbcp, etc. • AFS authentication improvements • PBS token passing and renewal • integrated login (AFS token on login, like SLAC)

  15. Plans • Objectivity support • Works now for private federations, but no data import • Support Grid “generic accounts”, so special RAL user registration is no longer necessary • Procure next batch of hardware • Delivery probably early 2003

  16. Tier1 internal networking will be a hybrid of 100Mb to nodes of cpu farms with 1Gb up from switches 1Gb to disk servers 1Gb to tape servers UK academic network SuperJANET4 2.5Gbit backbone upgrading to 10Gb in 2002 RAL 622Mb into SJ4 upgraded to 2.5Gb June 02 SJ4 has 2.5Gb interconnect to Geant 2.5Gb links to ESnet and Abilene just for research users UK involved in networking development internal with Cisco on QoS external with DataTAG Lamda CERN -> Starlight Private connections Network

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