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Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model
In this talk, we discuss the evolution of the computing model of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. After LHC Run 1, it became obvious that the available computing resources at the WLCG were fully used. The processing queue could reach millions of jobs during peak loads, for example before major scien...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2023
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2857895 |
_version_ | 1780977595782791168 |
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author | Klimentov, Alexei De, Kaushik ATLAS Collaboration |
author_facet | Klimentov, Alexei De, Kaushik ATLAS Collaboration |
author_sort | Klimentov, Alexei |
collection | CERN |
description | In this talk, we discuss the evolution of the computing model of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. After LHC Run 1, it became obvious that the available computing resources at the WLCG were fully used. The processing queue could reach millions of jobs during peak loads, for example before major scientific conferences and during large scale data processing. The unprecedented performance of the LHC during Run 2 and subsequent large data volumes required more computing power than the WLCG consortium pledged. In addition to unpledged/opportunistic resources available through the grid, the integration of resources such as supercomputers and cloud computing with the ATLAS distributed computing model has led to significant changes in both the workload management system and the data management system, thereby changing the computing model as a whole. The implementation of the data carousel model and data on-demand, cloud and HPC integration, and other innovations expanded the physics capabilities of experiments in the field of high energy physics and made it possible to implement bursty data simulation and processing. In the past few years ATLAS (and many other HEP/NP and astroparticle experiments) evaluated commercial clouds as an additional part of their computing resources. In this talk, we will briefly describe the ATLAS-Google and ATLAS-Amazon projects and how they were fully integrated with the ATLAS computing model. We will try to answer a fundamental question about the future computing model for experiments with large data volume and distributed computing resources by considering three possible options: HEP/NP experiments will continue to own and use pledged resources HEP/NP experiments will buy resources from commercial providers HEP/NP experiments will own core part of resources and buy additional resources from commercial providers |
id | cern-2857895 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2023 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-28578952023-05-05T18:57:11Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2857895engKlimentov, AlexeiDe, KaushikATLAS CollaborationFuture Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing ModelParticle Physics - ExperimentIn this talk, we discuss the evolution of the computing model of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. After LHC Run 1, it became obvious that the available computing resources at the WLCG were fully used. The processing queue could reach millions of jobs during peak loads, for example before major scientific conferences and during large scale data processing. The unprecedented performance of the LHC during Run 2 and subsequent large data volumes required more computing power than the WLCG consortium pledged. In addition to unpledged/opportunistic resources available through the grid, the integration of resources such as supercomputers and cloud computing with the ATLAS distributed computing model has led to significant changes in both the workload management system and the data management system, thereby changing the computing model as a whole. The implementation of the data carousel model and data on-demand, cloud and HPC integration, and other innovations expanded the physics capabilities of experiments in the field of high energy physics and made it possible to implement bursty data simulation and processing. In the past few years ATLAS (and many other HEP/NP and astroparticle experiments) evaluated commercial clouds as an additional part of their computing resources. In this talk, we will briefly describe the ATLAS-Google and ATLAS-Amazon projects and how they were fully integrated with the ATLAS computing model. We will try to answer a fundamental question about the future computing model for experiments with large data volume and distributed computing resources by considering three possible options: HEP/NP experiments will continue to own and use pledged resources HEP/NP experiments will buy resources from commercial providers HEP/NP experiments will own core part of resources and buy additional resources from commercial providersATL-SOFT-SLIDE-2023-164oai:cds.cern.ch:28578952023-05-05 |
spellingShingle | Particle Physics - Experiment Klimentov, Alexei De, Kaushik ATLAS Collaboration Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title | Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title_full | Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title_fullStr | Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title_full_unstemmed | Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title_short | Future Data-Intensive Experiment Computing Models: Lessons learned from the recent evolution of the ATLAS Computing Model |
title_sort | future data-intensive experiment computing models: lessons learned from the recent evolution of the atlas computing model |
topic | Particle Physics - Experiment |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2857895 |
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