HEPiX Fall 2007

US/Central
Seminar Room B (The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis)

Seminar Room B

The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
Gary Stiehr (The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis)
Description
The HEPiX forum unifies IT system support engineers from the High Energy Physics (HEP) laboratories and institutes, such as BNL, CERN, DESY, FNAL, IN2P3, INFN, JLAB, NIKHEF, RAL, SLAC, TRIUMF and others. The HEPiX meetings have been held regularly since 1991, and are an excellent source of information for IT specialists. That's why they enjoy large participation also from the non-HEP organizations.
Participants
  • Alan Silverman
  • Alex Iribarren
  • Alexandre Lossent
  • Andras Horvath
  • Andrei Maslennikov
  • Antonio Chan
  • Benjamin Gaidioz
  • Bruce Walker
  • Chris Brew
  • Chuck Boeheim
  • David Kelsey
  • Enrico Maria Vincenzo Fasanelli
  • Enrico Mazzoni
  • Federico Nebiolo
  • Gary Buhrmaster
  • Gary Stiehr
  • Gian Piero Siroli
  • Guy Coates
  • Helga Schwendicke
  • Helge Meinhard
  • Hung-Te Lee
  • Ian Gable
  • Iwona Sakrejda
  • Jacques-Charles Lafoucriere
  • James Casey
  • Jan Kundrát
  • Jan Michael
  • Jan Svec
  • Jiri Chudoba
  • Jonathan Nicholson
  • Kazimierz Popinski
  • Keith Chadwick
  • Kent Koeninger
  • Lukas Fiala
  • Manfred Alef
  • Martin Bly
  • Matthew Trunnell
  • Mattias Wadenstein
  • Michel Jouvin
  • Michele Michelotto
  • Oliver Oberst
  • Paul Kuipers
  • Peter Clapham
  • Peter van der Reest
  • Phil Butcher
  • Philippe Olivero
  • Pierrick Micout
  • Rafal Otto
  • Robert Quick
  • Roberto Gomezel
  • Sandra Philpott
  • Stanley Naymola
  • Steven McDonald
  • Tim Cutts
  • Tony Cass
  • Tore Mauset
  • Troy Dawson
  • Veronique Lefebure
  • Walter Schoen
  • Wayne Baisley
  • Wojciech WOJCIK
  • Wolfgang Friebel
    • 08:00
      Registrant Check-in / Continental Breakfast Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Welcome Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 1
        Welcome Message
    • Site Reports I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 2
        DAPNIA Site report
        What is new since the last HEPiX fall meeting in DAPNIA Saclay.
        Speaker: Mr Pierrick Micout (CEA DAPNIA Saclay)
        Slides
      • 3
        SLAC Site Report
        SLAC Site Report
        Speaker: Mr Charles Boeheim (SLAC)
        Slides
      • 4
        LAL / GRIF Site report
        Site report about LAL and GRIF (LCG T2)
        Speaker: Mr Michel Jouvin (LAL / IN2P3)
        Slides
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Site Reports II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 5
        TRIUMF Site Report
        TRIUMF site report
        Speaker: Dr Steven McDonald (TRIUMF)
        Slides
      • 6
        RAL Tier-1 Site Report
        Developments in the Tier-1 at RAL.
        Speaker: Mr Martin Bly (STFC - RAL)
        Slides
      • 7
        INFN Site Report
        an overall report about updates of INFN computing infrustructure
        Speaker: Dr Roberto Gomezel (INFN)
        Slides
      • 8
        GridKa Site Report
        Brief presentation of the current status at the Grid Computing Centre Karlsruhe.
        Speaker: Manfred Alef (Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe)
        Slides
    • 12:30
      Lunch Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA

      Lunch will not be provided.

    • Windows I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 9
        Using WSUS v3.0
        Using WSUS v3.0
        Speaker: Mr Wayne Baisley (Fermilab)
        Slides
      • 10
        Windows Vista and Office 2007 deployments at CERN
        Windows Vista has been released by Microsoft early this year and Office 2007 even at the end of the last year. First, in March 2007, Office 2007 pilot has been announced at CERN. This new Office suite version is now pre-installed on each new computer at CERN. In addition users can upgrade to Office 2007 their existing PCs. With such deployment schema we currently have Office 2007 installed on 15% of Windows PCs. Then, in August, Windows Vista pilot started. It took us some time and effort to test this new operating system and tune to our needs before we could give it to the end users. Currently we have more than 100 Vista computers in production at CERN.
        Speaker: Mr Rafal Otto (CERN)
        Slides
      • 11
        Experiences with Microsoft Key Management Server
        Experiences with Microsoft Key Management Server
        Speaker: Mr Wayne Baisley (Fermilab)
        Slides
    • 15:00
      Coffee/Snack Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Windows II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 12
        Advanced Group Policy Management
        Group Policy Objects (GPOs) have a pole position in a domain network management. Unfortunately, the primary tool for managing Group Policy in an enterprise, the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC), doesn’t provide a base for a workflow in any but the simplest management models. Microsoft Advanced Group Policy Management (AGPM), the technology included in the Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack for Software Assurance for the Microsoft Windows Vista, addresses the problem and adds the needed functionality. It increases the capabilities of the GPMC, providing offline editing of GPOs, role-based delegation of control, check-in/check-out capability, GPO templates, version control and rich reporting.
        Speaker: Kazimierz Popinski (DESY)
        Slides
    • General I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 13
        Sharepoint 2007 deployment at CERN
        CERN recently introduced a new type of web sites labelled "Collaboration Workspaces", based on SharePoint 2007. It aims at facilitating a number of tasks like web publishing, information gathering, and collaborative work on documents. We will present the use cases of SharePoint at CERN, brief technical details about the deployment and how we integrated SharePoint with existing web sites and applications.
        Speaker: Mr Alexandre Lossent (CERN)
        Slides
      • 14
        lustre at GSI
        Evaluation of a clustre file system for the GSI data file system - architecture of the test setup - RAID controller/disk array performance - OST I/O performance - client I/O perfomance - clustre file system performance - trunking/bonding
        Speaker: Dr Walter Schoen (GSI)
        Slides
    • 08:00
      Registrant Check-in / Continental Breakfast Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Site Reports III Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 15
        DESY Site Report
        DESY site report - Update on recent activities at DESY
        Speaker: Wolfgang Friebel (DESY)
        Slides
      • 16
        NDGF Site report
        Current status at the distributed tier1 "site" NDGF.
        Speaker: Mattias Wadenstein (NDGF)
        Slides
      • 17
        PDSF Site Report.
        Recent changes in PDSF organization. Benefits and pitfalls of a shared resource.
        Speaker: Dr Iwona Sakrejda (LBNL/NERSC)
        Slides
      • 18
        Jefferson Lab Site Report
        Update on JLab computing since the last HEPiX meeting.
        Speaker: Sandy Philpott (JLab)
        Slides
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Site Reports IV Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 19
        GSI site report
        Latest IT developments at GSI
        Speaker: Dr Walter Schoen (GSI)
        Slides
      • 20
        CERN site report
        News on CERN
        Speaker: Dr Helge Meinhard (CERN-IT)
        Slides
      • 21
        Genome Sequencing Center site report
        Information about the current IT infrastructure at the Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis and specifically how it has changed over the last year.
        Speaker: Gary Stiehr (The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis)
        Slides
      • 22
        Sanger Institute site report
        Sanger Institute site report
        Speaker: Dr Guy Coates (The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute)
        Slides
    • 12:30
      Lunch Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA

      Lunch is not provided.

    • Storage I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 23
        Presentation of the storage agenda
        Presentation of the storage agenda
        Speaker: Andrei Maslennikov (CASPUR)
        Slides
      • 24
        FSWG Progress Report
        The talk will be covering the work done during the second phase of HEPIX/IHEPCCC File Systems /Storage Working Group. The plans for the third and final phase will also be presented.
        Speaker: Andrei Maslennikov (CASPUR)
        Slides
      • 25
        NERSC storage update. What's happening and where are we going.
        NERSC storage update. What's happening and where are we going.
        Speaker: Dr Iwona SAKREJDA (LBNL/NERSC)
        Slides
      • 26
        Lustre HSM Project
        Lustre is a high performance parallel filesystem. It manages Petabytes of storage and allows hundreds of GB/s. Lustre HSM project will bring to Lustre ILM functionalities. This talk will describe the design of Lustre HSM.
        Speaker: Mr Jacques-Charles Lafoucriere (CEA)
        Slides
    • 15:00
      Coffee/Snack Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Storage II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 27
        Native Infiniband Storage
        Storage devices with the native Infiniband interface are gaining more and more popularity. I will discuss the available Infiniband storage access protocols, and will then use one of our recent products as an example.
        Speaker: John Josephakis (Data Direct Networks)
        Slides
      • 28
        Update on Chimera and NFS v4.1
        With the start of the Large Hadron Collider, presumably in 2008, the largest share of the produced and generated physics data outside CERN will be managed by the dCache storage element. Beside the challenge to handle storage in the order of tens of Petabyte in a single installation, the number of file operations per second is certainly even more challenging. Two years ago we identified PNFS, the dCache file system component, as to be the part which may become a bottleneck at the point in time when the global LHC data chain will be operated at its full capacity. There are various reasons for this assumption. Due to the fact, that pnfs existed before dCache was designed, dCache and pnfs interact by means of the nfs2 protocol, which introduces an nonessential layer of complexity. Moreover, although pnfs is using the Postgres database, it doesn't make use of enhanced modern database functionalities. Another striking issue is certainly the fact that single read/write locks are used internally, protecting large collection of file which leads to unnecessary queuing of file operation requests. To circumvent those and many other issues we designed and implemented Chimera, a file system name space engine based on the Java programming language as well as on modern database technologies. Furthermore, Chimera is an inevitable prerequisite in dCache to support the NFS 4.1 protocol. NFS 4.1 is currently in its final state of specification. As to our current plans NFS 4.1 will be supported in dCache in the foreseeable future. This presentation will give more insight in the advantages of Chimera and the NFS 4.1 plans of the dCache team.
        Speaker: Mr Peter van der Reest (DESY - IT)
        Slides
      • 29
        OpenAFS Status and Futures
        OpenAFS has completed seven years as an open source project. During that time OpenAFS has successfully tackled many challenges including new platforms, multi-processor systems, and network environments consisting of mobile clients and partitioning. OpenAFS Gatekeepers, Derrick Brashear and Jeffrey Altman, will provide updates on the latest OpenAFS offerings, the most common usage models, and describe a vision of what OpenAFS can achieve with the support of the HEP community. Time will be left to answer questions and receive feedback from current users and administrators and those considering deploying AFS in support of their applications and research projects.
        Speakers: Derrick Brashear (Sine Nomine Associates and OpenAFS Gatekeeper), Jeffrey Altman (Secure Endpoints Inc. and OpenAFS Gatekeeper)
        Slides
    • Bioinformatics/Genomics BOF Session 4136 (Genome Sequencing Center Conference Room)

      4136

      Genome Sequencing Center Conference Room

      4444 Forest Park Ave. St. Louis, MO 63108

      An informal gathering for HEPiX attendees from Bioinformatics/Genomics organizations. Topics focused more specifically on these organizations may be discussed. Anyone interested in such topics are welcome to attend.

    • 08:00
      Registrant Check-in / Continental Breakfast Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Data Centers I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 30
        Introduction & Results of HEPiX Survey
        I will give a general introduction to the problems faced by today's data centres and summarise the responses to the survey of HEPiX sites carried out prior to this meeting.
        Speaker: Dr Tony Cass (CERN)
        Slides
      • 31
        Expansion plans for the Brookhaven computer center
        Brookhaven is the primary computing center for RHIC, and it is also a Tier 1 computing center for the ATLAS experiment at CERN. The growing computing needs from both RHIC and ATLAS has exceeded the capacity of the current computer center, and a long-term expansion plan is now underway to meet future requirements. This presentation discusses our expansion plans as well as possible strategies that emphasize efficient growth of the computing facility resources.
        Speaker: Dr Antonio Chan (Brookhaven National Lab)
        Slides
      • 32
        The Genome Sequencing Center's Data Center Plans
        The Washington University School of Medicine is building a new data center with the needs of the Genome Sequencing Center in mind. It is being constructed to have full power and cooling redundancy for 120 racks of equipment, with an anticipated mixture of 2/3 8 kW storage racks and 1/3 25 kW compute racks. We will discuss its design, the problems we encountered along the way, our current thinking on delivering power to our racks and our best projections for how we will grow into that space.
        Speaker: Gary Stiehr (The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis)
        Slides
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Data Centers II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 33
        NERSC Data Center Presentation
        The abstract will be updated ASAP.
        Speaker: Dr Iwona Sakrejda (LBNL/NERSC)
        Slides
      • 34
        Procuring a New Machine Room
        We describe the processes surrounding the procurement of a new machine room for the RAL site.
        Speaker: Mr Martin Bly (STFC - RAL)
        Slides
      • 35
        Thinking Inside the Box
        SLAC recently acquired a Sun Project Black Box for expansion of its compute clusters. I will describe our experiences with installing and operating the box and its contents, and go over some of the economic tradeoffs in expansion strategies.
        Speaker: Mr Charles Boeheim (SLAC)
        Paper
    • 12:30
      Lunch Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA

      Lunch is not provided.

    • Virtualization I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 36
        Introduction
        Speaker: Mrs Veronique Lefebure (CERN Staff)
        Slides
      • 38
        HA and Virtualization team @ INFN
        Virtualization can enhance the functionality and ease the management of current and future Grids by enabling on-demand creation of services and virtual clusters with customized environments, dynamic provisioning and policy-based resource allocation, as well as enhance high availability and load balancing techniques. In this work, we consider the work done in the last year in different INFN sections in both fields. We present a summary of the activity reports sent by each team. At first we provide statistics and metrics of virtualization solutions for Tier-2 core services implemented in production; then a prototype of the use of provisioning system in a Grid data-center environment, allowing for classic OS provisioning, virtual machine partitioning, embedded monitoring and clustered configuration management; at last a prototype of higly available and load balanced Grid services on a virtualized architecture. Most of these activities include advanced usage and customization of mostly open-source tools as Xen para-virtualizer, Nagios monitoring system, Cfengine and Puppet configuration management systems, SAN implementations through iSCSI and AoE (both software and hardware based).
        Speaker: Mr Federico Nebiolo (INFN)
        Slides
      • 39
        Virtualisation Infrastructure in Karlsruhe (University & Research Center)
        Speaker: Mr Oliver Oberst (FZK)
        Slides
    • 15:00
      Coffee/Snack Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Virtualization II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 40
        Running EGEE services and worker nodes isung virtual machines
        New scientific communities, attracted by successful deployment of Grids by various scientific groups, bring new requirements on Grid middleware, such as fast turn-around for short jobs, access prioritisation, and need for various execution environment optimized to application specific requirements. We will argue that virtualized Grids, based on idea that different virtual worker nodes, running on and sharing physical cluster nodes, may help to implement some of these features. In this presentation, we will present our effort in virtualization of the national grid infrastructure in Czech Republic and we will describe a system called Magrathea, which we have developed to allow Grid job scheduling system to deal with several virtual machines (VMs) running concurrently on a single computer. With help of two HEP and EGEE related deployment scenarios (service consolidation of EGEE services and sharing of worker nodes between EGEE and MetaCentre grids) we will demonstrate how virtual machines can be already used to fullfill some of new requirements.
        Speaker: Jan Svec (CESNET)
        Slides
      • 41
        FermiGrid-HA
        We will discuss the deployment of Linux Virtualisation within the Fermilab Campus Grid (FermiGrid) infrastructure to provide highly available Grid services.
        Speaker: Dr Keith Chadwick (Fermilab)
        more information
        Slides
      • 42
        Virtualisation usage at CERN
        One may say that virtualisation techniques were present since some years. But this year it seems to be that virtualisation surged ahead of "Web 2.0" as the buzziest of buzzwords in the sector of information technology. In the first half of March 2007 the FIO group launched its virtualisation project. The main object is to use the availability of cheaper and more powerful machines to consolidate low utilisation services. Besides this, there is an increasing demand for test and development machines, which are usually not heavily loaded and thus could be easily virtualised. Half a year later I'd like to share experiences the project team made during the integration of a Xen based virtual machine environment into the existing infrastructures of CERNs Computing Centre. This covers issues regarding configuration, installation, monitoring, managing and modelling of the virtual machine environment. Since FIO is not the only group using virtualisation technologies I will also report about two other use cases. One is the Certification and Test of the gLite middleware within the EGEE project. The other one is the ETICS project which uses virtual machines in their build and test system.
        Speaker: Mr Jan Michael
        Slides
      • 43
        Virtualisation with the Globus Toolkit
        Speaker: Dr Kate Keahay
        Slides
      • 44
        HEP Applications with Globus Virtual Workspaces
        HEP applications often have very specific OS requirements and shared resources available to HEP in Canada may not be able to meet the specific OS requirements of a particular application. We have investigated VMs as a mechanism for packaging a complete application and shipping it out to a remote grid site complete with all its requirements. We will discuss experiences using Globus Virtual Workspaces for remote deployment of VMs to Canadian Grid sites.
        Speaker: Ian Gable (University of Victoria)
        Slides
    • Networking Session HEPiX Fall 2007 reserved room (Charlie Gitto's "On the Hill")

      HEPiX Fall 2007 reserved room

      Charlie Gitto's "On the Hill"

      5226 Shaw Ave. St. Louis, MO 63110

      Shuttles will be leaving from The Parkway Hotel (4550 Forest Park Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63108) starting at 18:00.

    • 08:00
      Registrant Check-in / Continental Breakfast Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Grid Management and Monitoring I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 45
        Monitoring and Metrics within FermiGrid
        We will present the tools which are used to monitor the grid services within the Fermilab Campus Grid (FermiGrid).
        Speaker: Dr Keith Chadwick (Fermilab)
        more information
        Slides
      • 46
        New WLCG Grid Monitoring Displays
        We will demonstrate two new tools for monitoring grid services within WLCG. The first is a set of grid probes, designed to test EGEE and OSG services at a site, integrated into nagios. The second is a new visualisation tool - GridMap (http://gridmap.cern.ch). This uses heatmaps to compactly display site availability for the entire WLCG Grid on a single page.
        Speaker: James Casey (CERN)
        Slides
      • 47
        Application level monitoring for the LHC experiments with the Experiment Dashboard monitoring system
        The presentation will give an overview of the Experiment Dashboard monitoring applications, providing LHC users with the possibility to monitor analysis and production activities on the distributed infrastructure. Experiment Dashboard monitoring applications are working in a transparent way across several middleware platforms used by the LHC experiments (LCG/gLite,OSG,NorduGrid). The presentation will cover production monitoring for ATLAS and CMS experiments and task monitoring for the CMS analysis users.
        Speaker: Dr Benjamin Gaidioz (CERN)
        Slides
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Grid Management and Monitoring II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 48
        Grid Security Update
        This talk will describe recent progress on Grid Security in WLCG and EGEE covering technical, operational and policy issues.
        Speaker: Dr David Kelsey (RAL)
        Slides
      • 49
        Centrallized Logging for the Open Science Grid
        The DOE SciDAC Center for Enabling Distributed Petascale Science (CEDPS) has been working with the Open Science Grid to design and deploy tools to facilitate troubleshooting problems on the Grid. This includes tools for central log collection, and advice on what should be logged. This talk will give an overview of progress to date and near-term plans for the future.
        Speaker: Iwona Sakrejda (LBNL)
        Slides
    • Benchmarking I Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 50
        Introduction to benchmarking session
        Just a few words to get the session kicked off...
        Speaker: Dr Helge Meinhard (CERN-IT)
        Slides
      • 51
        How INFN is moving out SI2K
        INFN Computing Committee is looking for a modern benchmark to replace the SPEC Int 2000 for Worker Node evaluation. Performance results from several HEP experiments have been compared with SPEC Int 2000 and Int 2006 to find the best agreement.
        Speaker: Dr michele michelotto (INFN Padova)
        Slides
    • 12:30
      Lunch Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA

      Lunch is not provided.

    • Benchmarking II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 52
        CPU Benchmarking at GridKa - Update November 2007
        I'll continue with my series of talks about CPU benchmarking issues. New topics are: - SPECint2006 measurements, what's the difference to SPECint2000? - SPECfp2006 measurements.
        Speaker: Manfred Alef (Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe)
        Slides
      • 53
        Topics around benchmarking at CERN
        A collection of remarks on recent procurements and our experience with including power consumption, SPECpower etc.
        Speaker: Dr Helge Meinhard (CERN-IT)
        Slides
      • 54
        Performance of Intel and AMD Processors on Lattice QCD Codes
        We will present lattice QCD applications performance data on current Intel and AMD processors and platforms, including the new quad-core AMD processors ("Barcelona").
        Speaker: Dr Don Holmgren (Fermilab)
        Slides
    • 15:00
      Coffee/Snack Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • Storage III Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 55
        End to End Data Integrity in the Enterprise
        The loss of a business critical application resulting from data corruption can be crippling and require huge efforts to repair. All businesses hope they have the know how to recover, yet no business wants an unplanned real-time test. Data corruption prevention, rather than recovery is key. Storage vendors, including those designing adapters, fabrics, and storage arrays design component-level data integrity into their products. Sometimes though, these techniques have not been sufficient and there is a trend to provide a mechanism for end to end data integrity. This talk discusses the nature of data corruption and what the storage industry is doing to provide open and ubiquitous end to end data integrity.
        Speaker: Jim Williams (Oracle Corp.)
        Slides
    • Security Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 56
        HEPIX Fall 2007 Cyber Security Update
        HEPIX Fall 2007 Cyber Security Update
        Speaker: Mr Gary Buhrmaster (SLAC)
        Slides
    • Data Centers III Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 57
        Large-scale remote management via IPMI
        In the recent years the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) has matured and become widespread enough that even commodity hardware can now be reliably and securely managed using its functionality. We report on the successful large-scale deployment of secure remote power control of machines and the integration of IPMI Serial-Over-LAN functionality into the existing remote console infrastructure.
        Speaker: Mr Andras Horvath (CERN)
        Slides
    • HEPiX Board Meeting Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • 08:00
      Registrant Check-in / Continental Breakfast Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • General II Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 58
        Scientific Linux Status Report
        Progress of Scientific Linux over the past 6 months. What we are currently working on. What we see in the future for Scientific Linux
        Speaker: Troy Dawson (FNAL)
        Paper
        Slides
      • 59
        SL Plenary Discussion
        Feedback to and input for the SL developers from the HEPiX community. This may influence upcoming decisions e.g. on distribution lifecycles.
        Speaker: Troy Dawson (FNAL)
        Paper
        Slides
      • 60
        High Density Visualizations
        "GUIs don't scale" has long been one of my mantras. I will demonstrate some recent work I have done in trying to overturn this limitation. By using very high density display techniques such as treemapping and pixel charts, I have been able to create some displays that show the status and history of thousands of machines without abstracting all of the meaningful detail out of them.
        Speaker: Mr Charles Boeheim (SLAC)
        Slides
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
    • General III Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA
      • 61
        Experience with Integrated Site Security (ISS)
        Integrated Site Security for Grids (ISSeG) is a project co-funded by the European Commission involving CERN, STFC and FZK. Integrated Site Security (ISS) coordinates improvements so that policies, rules, awareness and training elvolve in step with technological developments. This session will cover the resources available on www.isseg.eu: - Risk assessment questionnaire - Security recommendations - Checklist for system administrators - Checklist for developers - Training/advice for general users - Advice and material for managers
        Speaker: Mr Alan Silverman (Speaker) (CERN)
        Slides
      • 62
        CERN Alerter – RSS based system for the information broadcast to all CERN offices
        Nearly every large organization uses a tool to broadcast messages and information across the internal campus (messages like alerts announcing interruption in services or just information about upcoming events). These tools typically allow administrators (operators) to send "targeted" messages which are sent only to specific groups of users or computers, e/g only those located in a specified building or connected to a particular computing service. CERN has a long history of such tools. The last one - NICE Alerter used on all Windows-based computers had to be phased out as a consequence of phasing out NNTP at CERN. The new solution continues to provide the service based on cross-platform technologies, hence minimizing custom developments and relying on commercial software as much as possible. The new system, called CERN Alerter, is based on RSS (Really Simple Syndication) for the transport protocol and uses Microsoft SharePoint as the backend for database and posting interface. The windows-based client relies on Internet Explorer 7.0 with custom code to trigger the window pop-ups and the notifications for new events. Linux and Mac OS X clients could also rely on any RSS readers to subscribe to targeted notifications. The presentation will cover the architecture and implementation aspects of the new system.
        Speaker: Mr Rafal Otto (CERN)
        Slides
      • 63
        Single-Sign-On, Identity and Access Management at CERN
        In order to streamline access to applications, CERN recently deployed Single-Sign-On (SSO) mecanisms along with changes in identity management and access management. We will present the selected SSO solution and how it integrates with existing applications, as well as related changes in user accounts and roles.
        Speaker: Mr Alexandre Lossent (CERN)
        Slides
    • Closing Comments Seminar Room B

      Seminar Room B

      The Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University in St. Louis

      Eric P. Newman Education Center 320 South Euclid Avenue St. Louis, MO 63110 USA