U.S. Department of Energy`s Office of Science
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Transcript U.S. Department of Energy`s Office of Science
U.S. Department of Energy’s
Office of Science
Washington Update
July 21, 2004
ESCC Meeting
Mary Anne Scott
Program Manager
[email protected]
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Science
“The times, they
are a-changin”
Bob Dylan, 1963
U.S. Department of Energy
ASCR and MICS Staff
Office of Science
ASCR
Ed Oliver, Associate Director for Advanced Scientific Computing Research
Dan Hitchcock, Senior Technical Advisor
Linda Twenty, Program Analyst
MICS
Michael Strayer, Acting Director MICS
David Goodwin, NERSC
Fred Johnson, Computer Science, CS ISICs
Gary Johnson, ACRT, SAPP, Applied Math (acting)
Thomas Ndousse-Fetter, Network Research
Mary Anne Scott, Collaboratories, ESnet (acting)
George Seweryniak, HBCU
John van Rosendale, Visualization and Data Management, Math ISICs
Jane Hiegel- Secretary
Beverly Foltz - Secretary (temp)
Phone- 301-903-5800
Fax- 301-903-7774
U.S. Department of Energy
ASCR/MICS Mission
Office of Science
Discover, develop, and deploy the computational and
networking tools that enable researchers in the scientific
disciplines to analyze, model, simulate, and predict complex
physical, chemical, and biological phenomena important to the
Department of Energy (DOE).
Research:
Foster and support fundamental research in advanced scientific
computing – applied mathematics, computer science, and
networking
Facilities:
Operate supercomputers, a high performance network, and
related facilities
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Science
Shows OneSC,
Phase 1
ASCR in Relationship to
Office of Science
U.S. Department of Energy
ASCR in Relationship to
Federal IT Research
Office of Science
White House
President’s Information
Technology Advisory Committee
U.S. Congress
OSTP/OMB
(PITAC)
National Science & Technology Council
(NSTC)
Senior Principal’s Group for IT
National Coordination Office for
Computing, Information and
Communications
Interagency Working Group on IT
R&D
Participating Agencies
AHRQ, DARPA, DOE, EPA, NASA,
NIST, NOAA, NSA, NSF, OSD/URI
IWG/ITR&D
NCO/CIC
HECC
LSN
HCI&IM
HCSS
SDP
SEW
High End
Computing and
Communication
Coordinating
Group
Large Scale
Networking
Coordinating
Group
Human
Computer
Interface &
Information
Management
Coordinating
Group
High Confidence
Systems &
Software
Coordinating
Group
Software Design
& Productivity
Coordinating
Group
Social, Economic
& Workforce
Implications of IT
and IT Workforce
Development
Coordinating
Group
Joint Engineering Team (JET)
Network Research Team (NRT)
Middleware and Grid Infrastructure Coordination (MaGIC)
== DOE Direct Involvement
U.S. Department of Energy
Planning Workshops
Office of Science
High Performance Network Planning Workshop, August 2002
http://www.doecollaboratory.org/meetings/hpnpw
DOE Workshop on Ultra High-Speed Transport Protocols and Network
Provisioning for Large-Scale Science Applications, April 2003
http://www.csm.ornl.gov/ghpn/wk2003
Science Case for Large Scale Simulation, June 2003
http://www.pnl.gov/scales/
DOE Science Networking Roadmap Meeting, June 2003
http://www.es.net/hpertext/welcome/pr/Roadmap/index.html
Workshop on the Road Map for the Revitalization of High End Computing, June
2003
http://www.cra.org/Activities/workshops/nitrd
http://www.sc.doe.gov/ascr/20040510_hecrtf.pdf
ASCR Strategic Planning Workshop, July 2003
http://www.fp-mcs.anl.gov/ascr-july03spw
U.S. Department of Energy
Roadmap –
Requirements/Business Case
Office of Science
Over 40% of federal support to the physical sciences is in
the Office of Science
Supports over 15,000 PhDs, PostDocs and graduate students.
A similar number of PhDs, PostDocs and graduate students
funded by other federal, state and private agencies, and
international institutions are users/collaborators of DOE
facilities.
Most of these users/collaborators and many of the DOE funded
users are at universities; many of them are at international
locations.
Effective end-to-end (E2E) networking and middleware that
interfaces to university researchers and international
collaborators is critical for the success of the DOE Science
Mission.
U.S. Department of Energy
Roadmap –
Requirements/Business Case
Office of Science
Achieving the DOE science mission for the next five years
requires continuing advancements in networking and
middleware.
THE #1 DRIVER – Petabyte scale experimental and simulation
data systems will be increasing to exabyte scale data systems.
Examples: Bioinformatics, Climate, LHC, etc.
Computational systems that process or produce the data continue
to advance with Moore’s Law thereby driving network
requirements.
The combination of increases in data and computational power are
projected to at least continue the historical trend of doubling
network requirements every year.
U.S. Department of Energy
Roadmap –
Requirements/Business Case
Office of Science
The sources of the data, the computational resources and
the scientists consumers of the data are often not
collocated. This is due to two main reasons:
The experimental facilities, data facilities and computational
facilities are extremely expensive and consequently not replicated.
They are also distributed. Sharing them is often the only cost
effective solution.
The scientists are highly distributed, many of them being located
at universities.
Due to the distribution of experimental facilities, data
facilities, computational facilities and scientists,
networking and middleware are essential to achieve the
science.
U.S. Department of Energy
Network Issues –
Technology
Office of Science
Single wavelengths in the optical fiber transport can currently
only carry 10 Gbps and this limit is not anticipated to change
within the next five years. At least 40 Gbps will be required by
2008.
The current transmission protocol, TCP, will not at present
efficiently support speeds above a few Gbps per data stream.
The technologies to concurrently control multiple multi Gbps
data streams do not at present exist.
The technologies to perform effective cybersecurity above
several Gbps do not currently exist.
U.S. Department of Energy
…what now???
Office of Science
VISION - A scalable, secure, integrated network environment for ultra-scale
distributed science is being developed to make it possible to combine resources
and expertise to address complex questions that no single institution could manage
alone. It is creating the means for research teams to integrate unique and
expensive DOE research facilities and resources for remote collaboration,
experimentation, simulation and analysis.
Network Strategy
Production network
Base TCP/IP services; +99.9% reliable
High-impact network
Increments of 10 Gbps; switched lambdas (other solutions); 99% reliable
Research network
Interfaces with production, high-impact and other research networks; start electronic and
advance towards optical switching; very flexible
Revisit governance model
SC-wide coordination
Advisory Committee involvement
U.S. Department of Energy
What is ESCC today?
Office of Science
Standing committee
Members appointed by ESnet site organizations
Advisory to ESSC, providing a forum for the
consideration of a broad range of technical issues
Forum for information interchange
ESnet-wide activities and plans
Site-specific requirements and plans
Forum for interactions with the ESnet manager and staff
Forum for interactions with SC programs that use or
would like to use ESnet facilities
Where to next?
U.S. Department of Energy
Leadership-Class Computing
Office of Science
FY2004 $30M appropriation
for “the Department [of Energy] to acquire additional
advanced computing capability to support existing users in
the near term and to initiate longer-term research and
development on next generation computer architectures.”
May 12, 2004 announcement
ORNL partnered with Cray Inc, IBM Corp, and Silicon Graphics Inc
$25M to begin to build a 50 teraflop science research supercomputer
End station concept proposed
FY2005 President’s budget requests additional $25M to
continue
U.S. Department of Energy
Other Recent HQ activities
Office of Science
Committee of Visitors
Validate the effectiveness of the way Scientific
Research in managed in DOE Office of Science
March ’04 considered CS, Math, NC
March ’05 will consider facilities, Net Research
Advisory Committee
New members coming
JET Roadmapping Workshop
April 13-15, JLAB (Newport News, VA)