1 / 34

TeraGrid Science Gateways

TeraGrid Science Gateways. Nancy Wilkins-Diehr TeraGrid Area Director for Science Gateways wilkinsn@sdsc.edu. Entrance gate to the “Big House”, Ann Arbor, MI. You’ve heard a lot about the TeraGrid. Here’s a one-slide recap of the resources. TeraGrid resources today include:.

aria
Download Presentation

TeraGrid Science Gateways

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TeraGrid Science Gateways Nancy Wilkins-Diehr TeraGrid Area Director for Science Gateways wilkinsn@sdsc.edu Entrance gate to the “Big House”, Ann Arbor, MI University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  2. You’ve heard a lot about the TeraGrid Here’s a one-slide recap of the resources University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  3. TeraGrid resources today include: • But change is constant - new systems: • Data Analysis and Vis systems • Longhorn (TACC): Dell/NVIDIA, CPU and GPU • Nautilus (NICS): SGI UltraViolet, 1024 cores, 4TB global shared memory • Data-Intensive Computing • Dash (SDSC): Intel Nehalem, 544 processors, 4TB flash memory, Gordon (SDSC): • FutureGrid • Experimental computing grid and cloud test-bed to tackle research challenges in computer science • Keeneland • Experimental, high-performance computing system with NVIDIA Tesla accelerators • Tightly Coupled Distributed Memory Systems, 2 systems in the top 10 at top500.org • Kraken (NICS): Cray XT5, 99,072 cores, 1.03 Pflop • Ranger (TACC): Sun Constellation, 62,976 cores, 579 Tflop, 123 TB RAM • Shared Memory Systems • Cobalt (NCSA): Altix, 8 Tflop, 3 TB shared memory • Pople (PSC): Altix, 5 Tflop, 1.5 TB shared memory • Clusters with Infiniband • Abe (NCSA): 90 Tflops • Lonestar (TACC): 61 Tflops • QueenBee (LONI): 51 Tflops • Condor Pool (Loosely Coupled) • Purdue- up to 22,000 cpus • Gateway hosting • Quarry (IU): virtual machine support • Visualization Resources • TeraDRE (Purdue): 48 node nVIDIA GPUs • Spur (TACC): 32 nVIDIA GPUs • Storage Resources • Wide area filesystems( Lustre, GPFS) • Archival storage • Data replication service University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010 Source: Dan Katz, U Chicago

  4. So how do Gateways fit into this?Gateways are a natural result of the impact of the internet on worldwide communication and information retrieval • Implications on the conduct of science are still evolving • 1980’s, Early gateways, National Center for Biotechnology Information BLAST server, search results sent by email, still a working portal today • 1989 World Wide Web developed at CERN • 1992 Mosaic web browser developed • 1995 “International Protein Data Bank Enhanced by Computer Browser” • 2004 TeraGrid project director Rick Stevens recognized growth in scientific portal development and proposed the Science Gateway Program • Today, Web 3.0 and programmatic exchange of data between web pages • Simultaneous explosion of digital information • Growing analysis needs in many, many scientific areas • Sensors, telescopes, satellites, digital images, video, genome sequencers • #1 machine on Top500 today over 1000x more powerful than all combined entries on the first list in 1993 Only 18 years since the release of Mosaic! University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  5. vt100 in the 1980s and alogin window on Ranger today University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  6. Why are gateways worth the effort? ======= # Full path to executable executable=/users/wilkinsn/tutorial/bin/mcell # Working directory, where Condor-G will write # its output and error files on the local machine. initialdir=/users/wilkinsn/tutorial/exercise_3 # To set the working directory of the remote job, we # specify it in this globus RSL, which will be appended # to the RSL that Condor-G generates globusrsl=(directory='/users/wilkinsn/tutorial/exercise_3') # Arguments to pass to executable. arguments=nmj_recon.main.mdl # Condor-G can stage the executable transfer_executable=false # Specify the globus resource to execute the job globusscheduler=tg-login1.sdsc.teragrid.org/jobmanager-pbs # Condor has multiple universes, but Condor-G always uses globus universe=globus # Files to receive sdout and stderr. output=condor.out error=condor.err # Specify the number of copies of the job to submit to the condor queue. queue 1 • Increasing range of expertise needed to tackle the most challenging scientific problems • How many details do you want each individual scientist to need to know? • PBS, RSL, Condor • Coupling multi-scale codes • Assembling data from multiple sources • Collaboration frameworks #! /bin/sh #PBS -q dque #PBS -l nodes=1:ppn=2 #PBS -l walltime=00:02:00 #PBS -o pbs.out #PBS -e pbs.err #PBS -V cd /users/wilkinsn/tutorial/exercise_3 ../bin/mcell nmj_recon.main.mdl +( &(resourceManagerContact="tg-login1.sdsc.teragrid.org/jobmanager-pbs") (executable="/users/birnbaum/tutorial/bin/mcell") (arguments=nmj_recon.main.mdl) (count=128) (hostCount=10) (maxtime=2) (directory="/users/birnbaum/tutorial/exercise_3") (stdout="/users/birnbaum/tutorial/exercise_3/globus.out") (stderr="/users/birnbaum/tutorial/exercise_3/globus.err") ) University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  7. Gateways democratize access to high end resources • Almost anyone can investigate scientific questions using high end resources • Not just those in the research groups of those who request allocations • Gateways allow anyone with a web browser to explore • Opportunities can be uncovered via google • My then 11-year-old son discovered nanoHUB.org when his science class was studying Bucky Balls • Foster new ideas, cross-disciplinary approaches • Encourage students to experiment • But used in production too • Significant number of papers resulting from gateways including GridChem, nanoHUB • Scientists can focus on challenging science problems rather than challenging infrastructure problems University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  8. Today, there are approximately 35 gateways using the TeraGrid This just in 35% of TeraGrid users charging jobs (June-Sept, 2010) were gateway users! University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  9. Not just ease of useWhat can scientists do that they couldn’t do previously? • Linked Environments for Atmospheric Discovery (LEAD) - radar data coupled with on demand computing • Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) – access to sky surveys • Ocean Observing Initiative (OOI) – access to sensor data • PolarGrid – access to polar ice sheet data • SIDGrid – expensive datasets, analysis tools • GridChem –coupling multiscale codes • How would this have been done before gateways? University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  10. 3 steps to connect a gateway to TeraGrid • Request an allocation • Only a 1 paragraph abstract required for up to 200k CPU hours • Register your gateway • Visibility on public TeraGrid page • Request a community account • Run jobs for others via your portal • Staff support is available! • www.teragrid.org/gateways University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  11. Tremendous Opportunities Using the Largest Shared Resources - Challenges too! • What’s different when the resource doesn’t belong just to me? • Resource discovery • Accounting • Security • Proposal-based requests for resources (peer-reviewed access) • Code scaling and performance numbers • Justification of resources • Gateway citations • Tremendous benefits at the high end, but even more work for the developers • Potential impact on science is huge • Small number of developers can impact thousands of scientists • But need a way to train and fund those developers University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  12. When is a gateway appropriate? • Researchers using defined sets of tools in different ways • Same executables, different input • GridChem, CHARMM • Creating multi-scale workflows • Datasets • Common data formats • National Virtual Observatory • Earth System Grid • Some groups have invested significant efforts here • caBIG, extensive discussions to develop common terminology and formats • BIRN, extensive data sharing agreements • Difficult to access data/advanced workflows • Sensor/radar input • LEAD, GEON University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  13. How to get started? • Conduct a needs assessment • Should I build a gateway? • Can I use an existing gateway? • What problems am I trying to solve? • All gateways don’t need high end computing • Decide on a software approach • Recommended software at www.teragrid.org • Targeted effort by a few can benefit many • Could a pool of developers design gateways for different domain areas? Yes! • TeraGrid staff assistance University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  14. Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) Pipeline • Take raw genome data in the FASTA format and run a series of applications on it • RepeatMasker, PaCE, CAP3 and BLAST used to generate the final assembled output • Very variable run times (milliseconds to days) • EST Pipeline based on the SWARM Web Service that provides a web service interface to clients and also manages the bulk job submission using the Birdbath API to submit to Condor • 2M jobs run in 49 hours, only a handful of failures • Workflow is configured using a PHP based gateway that allows users to upload input data and select programs to run University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010 Source: Archit Kulshrestha, IU

  15. Cyberinfrastructure for Phylogenetic Research (CIPRES)www.phylo.org • Enables large-scale phylogenetic reconstructions • Parallel “fastest in the west” versions of applications such as MrBayes, Raxml and Garli • Easy to use graphical user interface • Over 800 users, June-Sept • 27% of all active TG users!! • 5M CPU hours awarded University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  16. Intellectual Merit: • the CIPRES portal is cited in at least 35 publications • this includes publications in Nature, PNAS, and Cell. • highlights of scientific findings: • New Family Tree for Arthropoda: A team of scientists compared genetic sequences from 75 arthropod species and drew a new family tree for the most successful phylum of animals on Earth. This work represents an important advance in the century-old problem of arthropod evolution. • Genome Sequence of a Transitional Eukaryote: A group of scientists sequenced the genome of Naegleria gruberi, a single-cell organism that is a key transitional species between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. This work provides new insights into the origins of subcellular organelles. • Co-evolution of Beetles and Flowering Plants: A group of researchers studied the evolutionary history of angiosperms and the beetles that interact with them. The work provided compelling experimental evidence for the long-postulated co-evolution of these two symbiotic groups. University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010 Source: Mark Miller, SDSC

  17. Broad Impacts: • 77% of all jobs have been submitted from locations in the USA. Submissions are received regularly from researchers at top-tier institutions such as Harvard, Yale, and Stanford. • Jobs are received regularly from academic institutions in 17 EPSCOR states. • Job submissions have been received from 34 countries on 5 continents. • At least 5 undergraduate classes are known to use the portal routinely. This is likely an underestimate (based on Web log patterns). • More than 45,000 jobs have been run on the Portal over its lifetime. Between Dec 1, 2010 and June 30, 2010, users ran 6,108 parallel jobs on the TeraGrid. University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010 Source: Mark Miller, SDSC

  18. Additional Gateways for Biology • www.teragrid.org/gateways • List of all TeraGrid gateways • Biodrugscore • RENCI Science Portal • Open Life Sciences Gateway • Robetta University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  19. Biodrugscorewww.biodrugscore.org • Derive and validate scoring functions • Create training sets using structural and binding data from multiple databases including PDBbind and PDBcal • Define the components of scoring functions by picking from among a list of pre-computed terms • Partial least-squares regression analysis • Validate scoring functions • Apply custom scoring functions for the ranking of chemical libraries that are pre-docked against a large set of binding cavities from the human proteome • If the receptor of interest is not available, biodrugscore makes it possible for users to dock libraries against their target on the TeraGrid using their own account. University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  20. NBCRwww.nbcr.net • Compute resources • Service projects • Quantum to Continuum Mechanics Tools • Data Analysis Tools for Molecular Sequences • Heart Modeling • Visualization and multi-scale modeling • Grid services and Telescience • Tools and downloads • 40+ packages, databases, services University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  21. RENCI Science Portalhttps://portal.renci.org/portal/ • 125 biology applications • From Antigenic to WordMatch and everything in between • RENCI Science Desktop • BlastMaster desktop University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  22. Open Life Sciences Gatewayhttp://lsgw.uc.teragrid.org • Bioinformatics applications and data collections • Portal access, direct Web services calls, workflows with Taverna • And now google gadgets! • igoogle.google..com, “add stuff”, search for TeraGrid University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  23. Robettahttp://www.robetta.org • Protein structure prediction server • Rosetta code from the David Baker laboratory • Also available • RosettaAntibody Server • RosettaDesign Server • RosettaDock Server • Rosetta Commons • FoldIt • Rosetta@home • Human Proteome Folding Project University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  24. Linked Environments for Atmospheric Discovery (LEAD) • Providing tools that are needed to make accurate • predictions of tornados and hurricanes • Meteorological data • Forecast models • Analysis and visualization tools • Data exploration and Grid workflow University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  25. Highlights: LEAD Inspires StudentsAdvanced capabilities regardless of location • A student gets excited about what he was able to do with LEAD • “Dr. Sikora:Attached is a display of 2-m T and wind depicting the WRF's interpretation of the coastal front on 14 February 2007. It's interesting that I found an example using IDV that parallels our discussion of mesoscale boundaries in class. It illustrates very nicely the transition to a coastal low and the strong baroclinic zone with a location very similar to Markowski's depiction. I created this image in IDV after running a 5-km WRF run (initialized with NAM output) via the LEAD Portal. This simple 1-level plot is just a precursor of the many capabilities IDV will eventually offer to visualize high-res WRF output. Enjoy! • Eric” (email, March 2007) University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  26. Community Climate System Model (CCSM) • Makes a world-leading, fully coupled climate model easier to use and available to a wide audience • Compose, configure, and submit CCSM simulations to the TeraGrid • Used in Purdue’s POL 520/EAS 591: Models in Climate Change Science and Policy • Semester-long projects, 100 year CCSM simulations, generate policy recommendations based on scientific, economic, and political models of climate change impacts University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  27. Analytical UltracentrifugationEmerging computational tool for the study of proteins • The Center for Analytical Ultracentrifugation of Macromolecular Assemblies, UT Health Sciences • Major advances in the characterization of proteins and protein complexes as a result of new instrumentation and powerful software • Monitoring the sedimentation of macromolecules in real time in the centrifugal field allows their hydrodynamic and thermodynamic characterization in solution • Observations are electronically digitized and stored for further mathematical analysis • http://uslims.uthscsa.edu/ University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010 Source: Modern analytical ultracentrifugation in protein science: A tutorial review, Wikipedia

  28. UltraScan provides a comprehensive data analysis environment • Management of analytical ultracentrifugation data for single users or entire facilities • Support for storage, editing, sharing and analysis of data • HPC facilities used for 2-D spectrum analysis and genetic algorithm analysis • TeraGrid (~2M CPU hours used) • Technische University of Munich • Juelich Supercomputing Center • Portable graphical user interface • MySQL database backend for data management • Over 30 active institutions • TeraGrid advanced support • Fault tolerance, workflows, use of multiple TG resources, community account implementation University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  29. Social Informatics Data GridCollaborative access to large, complex datasets • SIDGrid is unique among social science data archive projects • Streaming data which change over time • Voice, video, images (e.g. fMRI), text, numerical (e.g. heart rate, eye movement) • Investigate multiple datasets, collected at different time scales, simultaneously • Large data requirements • Sophisticated analysis tools http://www.ci.uchicago.edu/research/files/sidgrid.mov University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  30. Viewing multimodal data like a symphony conductor • “Music-score” display and synchronized playback of video and audio files • Pitch tracks • Text • Head nods, pause, gesture references • Central archive of multi-modal data, annotations, and analyses • Distributed annotation efforts by multiple researchers working on a common data set • History of updates • Computational tools • Distributed acoustic analysis using Praat • Statistical analysis using R • Matrix computations using Matlab and Octave Source: Studying Discourse and Dialog with SIDGrid, Levow, 2008 University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  31. Future Technical Areas • Web technologies change fast • Must be able to adapt quickly • Gateways and gadgets • Gateway components incorporated into any social networking page • 75% of 18 to 24 year-olds have social networking websites • iPhone apps? • Web 3.0 • Beyond social networking and sharing content • Standards and querying interfaces to programmatically share data across sites • Resource Description Framework (RDF), SPARQL University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  32. Gateways can further investments in other projects • Increase access • To instruments, expensive data collections • Increase capabilities • To analyze data • Improve workforce development • Can prepare students to function in today’s cross-disciplinary world • Increase outreach • Increase public awareness • Public sees value in investments in large facilities • Pew 2006 study indicates that half of all internet users have been to a site specializing in science • Those who seek out science information on the internet are more likely to believe that scientific pursuits have a positive impact on society University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  33. But gateways can only be truly effective if they are persistentGateway Sustainability Study • Characteristics of short funding cycles • Build exciting prototypes with input from scientists • Work with early adopters to extend capabilities • Tools are publicized, more scientists interested • Funding ends • Scientists who invested their time to use new tools are disillusioned • Less likely to try something new again • Start again on new short-term project • Need to break this cycle • EAGER grant to look at characteristics of successful gateways and domain areas where a gateway could have a big impact • Working with Katherine Lawrence, UM • 4 focus group meetings over 2 years • First 2 held June, 2010 • www.sciencegateways.org University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

  34. Thank you for your attention!Questions? Nancy Wilkins-Diehr, wilkinsn@sdsc.edu www.teragrid.org University of Michigan CI Days, November 2, 2010

More Related