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Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment
The ReadOut System (ROS) is a central and essential part of the ATLAS DAQ system. It receives and buffers data of events accepted by the first-level trigger from all subdetectors and first-level trigger subsystems. Event data are subsequently forwarded to the High-Level Trigger system and Event Buil...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1704547 |
_version_ | 1780936394980458496 |
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author | Borga, A Crone, G Green, B Kugel, A Joos, M Panduro Vazquez, W Schumacher, J Teixeira-Dias, P Tremblet, L Vandelli, W Vermeulen, J Werner, P Wickens, F |
author_facet | Borga, A Crone, G Green, B Kugel, A Joos, M Panduro Vazquez, W Schumacher, J Teixeira-Dias, P Tremblet, L Vandelli, W Vermeulen, J Werner, P Wickens, F |
author_sort | Borga, A |
collection | CERN |
description | The ReadOut System (ROS) is a central and essential part of the ATLAS DAQ system. It receives and buffers data of events accepted by the first-level trigger from all subdetectors and first-level trigger subsystems. Event data are subsequently forwarded to the High-Level Trigger system and Event Builder via a 1 GbE-based network. The ATLAS ROS is completely renewed in view of the demanding conditions expected during LHC Run 2 and Run 3, to replace obsolete technologies and space constraints require it to be compact. The new ROS will consist of roughly 100 Linux-based 2U high rack mounted server PCs, each equipped with 2 PCIe I/O cards and two four 10 GbE interfaces. The FPGA-based PCIe I/O cards, developed by the ALICE collaboration, will be configured with ATLAS-specific firmware, the so-called RobinNP firmware. They will provide the connectivity to about 2000 optical point-to-point links conveying the ATLAS event data. This dense configuration provides an excellent test bench for studying I/O efficiency and challenges in current COTS PC architectures with non-uniform memory and I/O access paths. In this paper we will report on the requirements for Run 2 and on design choices for a system complying with and possibly exceeding them, as well as discuss the results of performance measurements for different computer architectures, highlighting the effects of non-uniform resource distributions. Finally we will present the status of the project and outlook for operation in 2015. |
id | cern-1704547 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2014 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-17045472019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1704547engBorga, ACrone, GGreen, BKugel, AJoos, MPanduro Vazquez, WSchumacher, JTeixeira-Dias, PTremblet, LVandelli, WVermeulen, JWerner, PWickens, FEvolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experimentParticle Physics - ExperimentThe ReadOut System (ROS) is a central and essential part of the ATLAS DAQ system. It receives and buffers data of events accepted by the first-level trigger from all subdetectors and first-level trigger subsystems. Event data are subsequently forwarded to the High-Level Trigger system and Event Builder via a 1 GbE-based network. The ATLAS ROS is completely renewed in view of the demanding conditions expected during LHC Run 2 and Run 3, to replace obsolete technologies and space constraints require it to be compact. The new ROS will consist of roughly 100 Linux-based 2U high rack mounted server PCs, each equipped with 2 PCIe I/O cards and two four 10 GbE interfaces. The FPGA-based PCIe I/O cards, developed by the ALICE collaboration, will be configured with ATLAS-specific firmware, the so-called RobinNP firmware. They will provide the connectivity to about 2000 optical point-to-point links conveying the ATLAS event data. This dense configuration provides an excellent test bench for studying I/O efficiency and challenges in current COTS PC architectures with non-uniform memory and I/O access paths. In this paper we will report on the requirements for Run 2 and on design choices for a system complying with and possibly exceeding them, as well as discuss the results of performance measurements for different computer architectures, highlighting the effects of non-uniform resource distributions. Finally we will present the status of the project and outlook for operation in 2015.ATL-DAQ-SLIDE-2014-254oai:cds.cern.ch:17045472014 |
spellingShingle | Particle Physics - Experiment Borga, A Crone, G Green, B Kugel, A Joos, M Panduro Vazquez, W Schumacher, J Teixeira-Dias, P Tremblet, L Vandelli, W Vermeulen, J Werner, P Wickens, F Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title | Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title_full | Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title_fullStr | Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title_full_unstemmed | Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title_short | Evolution of the ReadOut System of the ATLAS experiment |
title_sort | evolution of the readout system of the atlas experiment |
topic | Particle Physics - Experiment |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1704547 |
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