Michel Jouvin
(LAL / IN2P3)
10/10/2006, 09:30
This talk will present Trac, a unique open source tool
combining a wiki, an issue tracker, a Subversion client and
a roadmap manager. More than a tool, Trac is an extensible
framework based on plugins. LAL is currently using this tool
both for software development and system administration.
Jim Fromm
(Fermilab)
10/10/2006, 10:30
In this talk, we will present the status of Scientific
Linux, focusing on relevant changes in the past six months.
Next, we will also present current projects with SL,
focusing on SL 5.x and scientific applications. To conclude,
we will talk about future enhancements.
Hege Hansbakk
(CERN)
10/10/2006, 11:00
The Database and Engineering Services (DES) Group of the IT
Department at CERN supports and maintains a CERN TWiki.
This presentation will cover the history of TWiki at CERN,
facts about the system, the technical setup, problems we
face and our plans for finding a solution to them.
Sebastian Lopienski
(CERN)
10/10/2006, 11:30
Nowadays, IT departments provide, and people use many
various computing services of more and more heterogeneous
nature. And there is a growing need of having a common
display that groups these different services and reports
about their status and availabilities in a uniform way. At
CERN, it led to launching the SLS project.
Service Level Status Overview (SLS) is a web-based tool...
Michel Jouvin
(LAL / IN2P3)
10/10/2006, 13:30
This talk will present LAL experience to address the need to
track system configuration changes and link this with an
issue tracker, using a combination of Subversion and Trac.
Karin Miers
(GSI/Darmstadt)
10/10/2006, 14:30
This presentation gives an overwiev about the methods used
to ensure the high availability of important services such
as data base, web service, central file server a. o. Apart
from commercial products for
certain systems (Oracle, Exchange) different open source
linux tools (heartbeat, drbd, mon) are combined with
monitoring and hardware
methods and adapted to our special needs.
Michel Jouvin
(LAL / IN2P3)
10/10/2006, 15:30
Deploying grid services means managing a potentially large
number of machines that partially share their configuration.
A tool is needed not only to install but to maintain such a
configuration. Quattor, developped as part of EDG, is such a
tool. This talk will focus on the LCG/gLite support in Quattor.