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Setting the scene

Setting the scene. Cliff Addison. A Unique North-West Project: advancing Grid Technologies and Applications. Technology “tuned to the needs of practicing scientists”. Hooks to other Grid consortia: NGS, WRG. Top end: HPCx and CSAR. Applications and industry.

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Setting the scene

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  1. Setting the scene Cliff Addison

  2. A Unique North-West Project:advancing Grid Technologies and Applications Technology “tuned to the needs of practicing scientists”. Hooks to other Grid consortia: NGS, WRG Top end: HPCx and CSAR Applications and industry Pharma, meds, bio, social, env, CCPs Portals, client toolkits, active overlays Mid range: NW-GRID and local clusters User interfaces Sensor networks and experimental facilities Advanced Network technology Desktop pools: Condor etc.

  3. The NW-Grid ProjectAims and Partners • Aims: • Establish, for the region, a world-class activity in the deployment and exploitation of Grid middleware • realise the capabilities of the Grid in leading edge academic, industrial and business computing applications • Leverage 100 posts plus £15M of additional investment • Project Partners: • Daresbury Laboratory: CSED and e-Science Centre • Lancaster University: Management School, Physics, e-science and Computer Science • University of Liverpool: Physics and Computer Services • University of Manchester: Research Computing, Computer Science, Chemistry, Bio-informatics

  4. The NW-GRID ProjectFunding Project Funding: • North West Development Agency • £5M over 4 years commencing April 2004 • £2M capital for systems at four participating sites with initial systems in year 1 (Jan 2006) and upgrades in year 3 (Jan 2008) • £3M for staff – about 15 staff for 3 years Complemented by “Teragrid competitive” private Gbit/s link among sites.

  5. Condor Pools • Often an excellent starting point for a Campus Grid. • General issues for pooled systems: • Which PC’s to allocate to a pool? • How decide when a Condor job can run? • Who can run jobs? • What executables can they run? • How is the input / output handled? • Energy issues?

  6. Other interesting topics • Mark Calleja’s (Cambridge) ideas: • Virtualisation • Can applications be sand-boxed in a “safe” OS? • Do we run node images (i.e. application+OS) rather than simple applications? • Where do we go from here? • How avoid “painting Campus Grids into a corner”? • Where obtain future funding? • How integrate with external grids?

  7. Ideas for today • Most talks have a 45 minute slot • I hope there is lots of time for questions, but try to leave these to the end. • Lunch is at 12:30 • Tea / coffee at 15:00 to go along with the discussion. • I’ll attempt to record questions that have been asked and bring these back into discussion at the end of the day. • Ideas have also been raised about a follow-up “work-in” meeting to discuss practical issues – likely at Manchester in the December-January timescale, but nothing confirmed yet.

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