1 / 13

Thoughts on International e-Science Infrastructure

Thoughts on International e-Science Infrastructure. Kevin Thompson U.S. National Science Foundation Office of Cyberinfrastructure iGrid2005 9/27/2005. NSF and International Cyberinfrastructure. The pursuit of scientific discovery is a global endeavor Witness this event!

misae
Download Presentation

Thoughts on International e-Science Infrastructure

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. Thoughts on International e-Science Infrastructure Kevin Thompson U.S. National Science Foundation Office of Cyberinfrastructure iGrid2005 9/27/2005

  2. NSF and International Cyberinfrastructure • The pursuit of scientific discovery is a global endeavor • Witness this event! • NSF recognition via Office of International Science and Engineering (OISE) and most other NSF cyberinfrastructure activities

  3. Relevant NSF Activities • International Research Network Connections (IRNC), see www.irnclinks.net • TransPAC2 (Japan - U.S.) • GLORIAD (China, Russia, Korea, Canada, U.S.) • WHREN (Latin America - U.S.) • TransLight/StarLight (Europe/Geant - U.S.) • TransLight/PacificWave (Australia - U.S.) • Multi-GB/s (mostly 10 Gbs) links and associated services connecting U.S. research networks with peer networks in other parts of the world

  4. More NSF Key Elements • NSF Middleware Initiative • www.nsf-middleware.org • Middleware and grid software development, integration, deployment and support • Dozens of activities with international scope • Shibboleth and campus middleware • Condor, NMI Build&Test • Common Instrument Middleware Architecture (CIMA) and work with X-ray crystallography in collaboration with Crystal Structure Analysis Facility (CSAF) in Sydney, Australia

  5. More NSF Key Elements • Other NSF Office of Cyberinfrastructure (OCI) Investments with international scope • Optiputer • Experimental Infrastructure Networks e.g. DRAGON (whose driving app is e-VLBI - realtime radio telescope data acquisition and correlation) • PRAGMA (38% of the demos at iGrid2005 involve PRAGMA members!) and NLANR • Open Science Grid *VDT* and a number of other grid-related projects, e.g. GEON, NEESgrid, BIRN and others • Network Startup Resource Center (NSRC) • Supporting U.S. participation in European initiatives such as EGEE • and direct support for iGrid2005

  6. PRAGMA History, Structure, Mission • Founded March 2002 • NSF funds initiated the activity • Matched multi-fold by others • Open, institutional based organization • 24 Member Institutions, 100 + individuals • Steering Committee involving 14 institutions • Two workshops per year • Motivations • Science is international, grid can revolutionize science, but is too hard to use, software and people must interoperate • Mission: • Among a community of investigators in the Pacific Rim • Establish sustained collaborations • Advance the use of the gridtechnologies for applications

  7. PRAGMA Grid Testbed KISTI, Korea NCSA, USA AIST, Japan CNIC, China SDSC, USA TITECH, Japan UoHyd, India NCHC, Taiwan CICESE, Mexico ASCC, Taiwan KU, Thailand UNAM, Mexico USM, Malaysia BII, Singapore UChile, Chile MU, Australia

  8. PRIME 2004 CNIC Joins in 2005

  9. NLANR AMP Deployment

  10. NLANR Measurement Node Deployment

  11. Opportunities for global collaboration and joint projects • 3 or more levels • Network fabric • Middleware, software • Project/community/application, and tying in compute/storage resources • As already seen, great collaborative activities already underway • What follows are a few ideas for a global community focus on moving global cyberinfrastructure forward

  12. Moving Forward • Network Fabric • Expanding international connectivity to new regions • Exploring threshold between shared IP networks and dedicated “lightpaths” and deterministic paths • Improved coordination on • Measurement and security • NOCs - federating, sharing data, alerts, etc. • Open Exchange Points such as the Hong Kong Open Exchange Point • Middleware, Software • Improved coordination on software development, integration, testing and support

  13. Finally • Make what we have in place today “better” • Are we satisfied with end-to-end performance as it exists across line-rate and stable 10G shared IP networks? • Aggressive deployment, where feasible, of new technologies by r&e networks • Research prototype --> production environment • iGrid2005 tech --> future(?)

More Related