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Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system

The CERN ATLAS experiment successfully uses a worldwide computing infrastructure to support the physics program during LHC Run 2. The Grid workflow system PanDA routinely manages 250 to 500 thousand concurrently running production and analysis jobs to process simulation and detector data. In total m...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Elmsheuser, Johannes, Di Girolamo, Alessandro
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201921403010
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2644515
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author Elmsheuser, Johannes
Di Girolamo, Alessandro
author_facet Elmsheuser, Johannes
Di Girolamo, Alessandro
author_sort Elmsheuser, Johannes
collection CERN
description The CERN ATLAS experiment successfully uses a worldwide computing infrastructure to support the physics program during LHC Run 2. The Grid workflow system PanDA routinely manages 250 to 500 thousand concurrently running production and analysis jobs to process simulation and detector data. In total more than 370 PB of data is distributed over more than 150 sites in the WLCG and handled by the ATLAS data management system Rucio. To prepare for the ever growing LHC luminosity infuture runs new developments are underway to even more efficiently use opportunistic resources such as HPCs and utilize new technologies. This paper will review and explain the outline and the performance of the ATLAS distributed computing system and give an outlook to new workflow and data management ideas for the beginning of the LHC Run 3. It will be discussed that the ATLAS workflow and data management systems are robust, performant and can easily cope with the higher Run 2 LHC performance. There are presently no scaling issues and each subsystem is able to sustain the large loads.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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spelling cern-26445152022-08-10T12:22:22Zdoi:10.1051/epjconf/201921403010http://cds.cern.ch/record/2644515engElmsheuser, JohannesDi Girolamo, AlessandroOverview of the ATLAS distributed computing systemParticle Physics - ExperimentThe CERN ATLAS experiment successfully uses a worldwide computing infrastructure to support the physics program during LHC Run 2. The Grid workflow system PanDA routinely manages 250 to 500 thousand concurrently running production and analysis jobs to process simulation and detector data. In total more than 370 PB of data is distributed over more than 150 sites in the WLCG and handled by the ATLAS data management system Rucio. To prepare for the ever growing LHC luminosity infuture runs new developments are underway to even more efficiently use opportunistic resources such as HPCs and utilize new technologies. This paper will review and explain the outline and the performance of the ATLAS distributed computing system and give an outlook to new workflow and data management ideas for the beginning of the LHC Run 3. It will be discussed that the ATLAS workflow and data management systems are robust, performant and can easily cope with the higher Run 2 LHC performance. There are presently no scaling issues and each subsystem is able to sustain the large loads.The CERN ATLAS experiment successfully uses a worldwide computing infrastructure to support the physics program during LHC Run 2. The Grid workflow system PanDA routinely manages 250 to 500 thousand concurrently running production and analysis jobs to process simulation and detector data. In total more than 370 PB of data is distributed over more than 150 sites in the WLCG and handled by the ATLAS data management system Rucio. To prepare for the ever growing LHC luminosity in future runs new developments are underway to even more efficiently use opportunistic resources such as HPCs and utilize new technologies. This presentation will review and explain the outline and the performance of the ATLAS distributed computing system and give an outlook to new workflow and data management ideas for the beginning of the LHC Run 3.ATL-SOFT-PROC-2018-009oai:cds.cern.ch:26445152018-10-22
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Elmsheuser, Johannes
Di Girolamo, Alessandro
Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title_full Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title_fullStr Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title_full_unstemmed Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title_short Overview of the ATLAS distributed computing system
title_sort overview of the atlas distributed computing system
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201921403010
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2644515
work_keys_str_mv AT elmsheuserjohannes overviewoftheatlasdistributedcomputingsystem
AT digirolamoalessandro overviewoftheatlasdistributedcomputingsystem