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GridPP Collaboration Meeting Networking: Current Status

GridPP Collaboration Meeting Networking: Current Status. Robin Tasker CCLRC, Daresbury Laboratory 3 June 2004. MB-NG. Managed Bandwidth. Setting the Scene. Retrospective of recently complete / completing projects with relevant output.

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GridPP Collaboration Meeting Networking: Current Status

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  1. GridPP Collaboration Meeting Networking: Current Status Robin Tasker CCLRC, Daresbury Laboratory 3 June 2004

  2. MB-NG Managed Bandwidth Setting the Scene Retrospective of recently complete / completing projects with relevant output Output from these projects feeds directly into the GridPP Network Objectives o To bring very high rate/long distance data transport to practical use in experimental production environments (both current and LHC experiments). o To exploit the UKLIGHT infrastructure to utilise switched dedicated circuits between major centres including UK Tier1 and 2, CERN and FNAL o To participate in EGEE network monitoring service developments and deployment within the UK, and development of diagnostic engines for Grid operations

  3. WP2, High Performance Networkshttp://icfamon.dl.ac.uk/DataTAG-WP2/ • Task 2.1, High Performance Transport • Transport applications for high bandwidth-delay connections • D2.1, D2.2 delivered on time • Linux Networking Kernel Technical Report • SC2003; PFLD Workshop CERN (2003), Argonne(2004); GNEW 2004 • Presentations / Publications / “How To” guides • Wide European and International Collaboration • Task 2.2, End-to-End Inter-Domain QoS • To study the problem of Quality of Service provisioning in inter-domain • heterogeneous environments • D2.1, D2.3 delivered on time • D2.3 Supplement – TCP stacks and IP QoS • PFLD Workshop CERN (2003), Argonne(2004); GNEW 2004 • Presentations / Publications / “How To” guides • Collaboration with Dante and the NRENs • Task 2.3, Advance Reservation • The evaluation of different advance reservation approaches and their • interoperability between GRID domains • D2.4, D2.5 delivered on time • Presentations / Publications / GNEW 2004 3

  4. High Performance TransportAchievements • End System Performance – Motherboard and Network Interface Card • Methodology and tools to analyse and understand the performance of the hardware; to ensure that the hardware configuration is optimal. • Linux Kernel Performance – Operating System, Protocol Stack, Drivers • Linux Networking Kernel: Technical Report describing the operation of TCP. • Develop kernel “patches” to improve performance and feed back such information to the Linux kernel developers. • Analysis and test of driver strategies. • Transport Protocols – The Internal Operation of TCP • Understanding Standard TCP – slow start and congestion avoidance; AIMD; packet loss; RTT effect; MTU effect; TCP fairness; the role of ECN. • Implementation and demonstration of High Speed TCP; Scalable TCP; Grid DT and H-TCP. • Comparison of the different TCP stacks to assess their effect • Forensic examination of TCP during operation using Net100/Web100 • Experience of FAST TCP from Caltech across DataTAG • I2 LSR: broken 5 times in 2003, currently at 5.64 Gbps with IPv4 between CERN and Los Angeles (10,949 km) and at 4 Gbps with IPv6 between CERN and Phoenix (11,539 km ) 4

  5. MB-NG Managed Bandwidth Achievements of the project • Built a leading edge, multi-domain, QoS enabled network running at 2.5 Gbit/s • Proved “Carrier” and “Campus” class router equipment • Demonstrated use of QoS in scientific environment • A managed bandwidth solution for SuperJANET based on MPLS • High performance data transport achieved and understood (leveraged DataTAG) • 24 hours > Gbit/s • 800 Mbits/s disk to disk for real data • Demonstrated edge control of QoS (with sister project “GRS”)  see demo • Successful External activities • DataTAG • QoS work with Geant/DANTE • UKLIGHT • RealityGrid and SC2003 • Dissemination • Technical reports • Conferences and papers • A dissemination workshop in July

  6. MB-NG Managed Bandwidth BaBar Data Transfers from Manchester to RAL BaBar @ Manchester Current transfers of 900 GBytes of BaBar data from RAL to Manchester ~40 Hours 100 Mbit/s MB-NG The two rates are BBFTP “verbose and “non-verbose” mode MB-NG does the same transfer in ~10 Hours 400 Mbit/s CCLRC ATLAS Centre

  7. AchievementsNetwork Monitoring • Definition and deployment of a scalable Grid network monitoring architecture (large successful usage of RGMA) • Probe Coordination Protocol deployed, scheduling all network measurements between NMs • Central MySQL Archive hosting all network metrics and GridFTP logging for online analysis

  8. Exploitation • Firstly, WP7 has largely worked with Grid standardization bodies: • Large participation to GGF areas and working groups, and in particular with Grid High-Performance Networking (GHPN-RG) and with Network Measurement (NM-WG). • Work towards a first prototype of an OGSI (Grid service) based measurement architecture • Close participation in the GLUE initiative • Secondly, products developed by WP7 have been deployed on EDG testbeds but also successfully in other grid environments: • The WP7 Network Monitoring Infrastructure, based on standard and homemade measurement tools: CrossGrid, LCG • MapCenter, a grid monitoring and visualization tool: DataGRID, DataTAG, CrossGrid, LCG, GridIreland, PlanetLab, L-Bone, Atlas Grid, E-Toile, CEOS Grid, Nanyang Campus Grid, etc…

  9. Year 1 Achievements Purpose:“…design and deploy an infrastructure for network performance Monitoring within the UK e-Science community.” Consistent view at each site will allow easy navigation across the infrastructure. http://gridmon.dl.ac.uk/gridmon/ "Start page" at each site shows the centre's connectivity to other UK sites based on the last set of tests. Sites are “traffic light” colour coded, and floating text displays the packet loss (%) . Clicking on a site takes the user to the input form for that site, from where they can select the remote sites, metrics and date range of interest. Clicking "View Plot" produces the corresponding data plot.

  10. test request (request schema) tests results (publication schema) Year 2 Achievements 1. Within the GGF Network Measurements Working Group (NM-WG): Network Monitoring Service Defining XML schemas for requesting tests and historic data, and publishing network measurements. Aims to standardise communication, and use XML, for web services and OGSI/WSRF model. 2. Within the GGF Grid High Performance Network Group (GHPN-RG) Plan to model the network as a Grid resource, forming an integrated stack. This is to be achieved through a set of network sub-services, inc. a network monitoring service

  11. GridPP-2 Network Objectives 1. To bring the technology of very high rate/long distance data transport to practical use in experimental production environments (both current and LHC experiments); and to demonstration of one or more UK HEP experiments being able to regularly transport data at rates in excess of 500 Mbit/s and preferably 1 Gbit/s. 2. To exploit the UKLIGHT infrastructure to utilise switched dedicated circuits between major centres including UK Tier1 and 2, CERN and FNAL. 3. To participate in EGEE oriented network monitoring service developments and deployment within the UK, and development of diagnostic engines for Grid operations 4. To maintain the strategic relation which HEP holds with all relevant major Network authorities globally. 5. To provide PPNCG support and other work as specified

  12. Practical Stuff for High Performance 1. A workshop…. 2. A Cookbook, i.e. a web presence, building on the DataTAG work with the “How to…..” guides and the Linux Networking Kernel technical report 3. Practical Examples: extending from what’s possible in real life, e.g. MB-NG Babar work, Reality Grid and SC2003, now and in the future

  13. Practical Stuff for High Performance ESLEA: Exploitation of Switched Lightpaths for eScience Applications The following applications can benefit immediately from UKLight: HEP :Particle Physics Data transfer VLBI: Radio Astronomy Very Long Baseline Interferometry HPC: Computational steering and Visualisation eHealth: Oncology Remote Visualisation We propose a coordinated approach across these disciplines, whereby resources and expertise is shared, and the benefit gained from the leverage of other projects and resources accrues to all disciplines.

  14. Network Monitoring for GridPP Already working with To provide infrastructure of geographically distributed monitoring nodes within the GridPP community To define standardised interfaces for machine access to monitoring nodes using Grid/Web services. Continuing the work within the GGF NM-WG and GHPN-RG, o to develop the network monitoring service based on standardise communication, and XML for the web services and OGSA/WSRF models; and o to model the network as a Grid resource to include a network management service To develop requirements specification through consultation with the GOC e.g. e-Science, and EGEE, for fault detection & analysis techniques and to participate in the Internet2 piPEs project to develop a “diagnostic engine”

  15. Questions?

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