The Ibis e-Science Software Framework - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Ibis e-Science Software Framework

Description:

The Ibis e-Science Software Framework Henri Bal High Performance Distributed Computing group Department of Computer Science VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:213
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 58
Provided by: maas2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Ibis e-Science Software Framework


1
The Ibis e-Science Software Framework
  • Henri Bal
  • High Performance Distributed Computing group
  • Department of Computer Science
  • VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Frank J. Seinstra, Jason Maassen, Niels Drost
  • Netherlands eScience Center

2
Introduction
  • Distributed systems continue to change
  • Clusters, grids, clouds, mobile devices
  • Distributed applications continue to change
  • e-Science, web, pervasive applications
  • Distributed programming continues to be
    notoriously difficult

3
Distributed Systems 1980sMultiple PCs on a
(local) network
  • Networks of Workstations (NOWs)
  • Collections of Workstations (COWs)
  • Processor pools
  • Condor pools
  • Clusters

4
Distributed Systems 1990sSharing wide-area
resources
  • Metacomputing (Smarr Catlett, CACM)
  • Flocking Condor (Epema)
  • DAS (Distributed ASCI Supercomputer)
  • Grid Blueprint (Foster Kesselman)
  • Desktop grids, SETI_at_home

5
Distributed Systems 2000s
  • Cloud computing
  • Pay-on-demand
  • Virtualization
  • Hardware diversity /heterogeneous computing
  • Green IT
  • The Networked World
  • Sensor networks
  • Smart phones

6
Our approach
  • Study fundamental underlying problems
  • hand-in-hand with realistic applications
  • integrate solutions in one system Ibis

!
Distributed Systems
User
7
Ibis History
  • Started as NWO project (2002)
  • VL-e (2003-2009)
  • EU (JavaGAT, XtreemOS, Contrail)
  • VU grant Frank Seinstra (2008-2012)
  • Currently COMMIT Netherlands eScience Center

8
  • COMMIT
  • COMMIT is a public-private research community
    solving grand challenges in information and
    communication science shaping tomorrows society.
  • COMMIT has 15 projects and 200 people in 80
    organisations such as universities, TNO, Thales,
    Logica, Philips, AMC, and SMEs like DevLab,
    Hyves, Waag.
  • COMMIT cooperates closely with EIT ICT-Labs.
  • COMMIT delivers science, disseminates its
    results, measures its impact, generates synergy.

9
(No Transcript)
10
Outline
  • Problem Solving vs. System Fighting
  • Jungle Computing
  • Example applications
  • Computational Astrophysics
  • Multimedia Content Analysis
  • The Ibis Software Framework
  • The 3 Common Uses of Ibis
  • Master Key Glue HPC
  • Some current work

11
  • Ibis Problem Solving vs. System Fighting

12
A Random Example Supernova Detection
  • DACH 2008, Japan
  • Distributed multi-cluster system
  • Heterogeneous
  • Distributed database (image pairs)
  • Large vs small databases/images
  • Partial replication
  • Image-pair comparison given (in C)
  • Find all supernova candidates
  • Task 1 As fast as possible
  • Task 2 Idem, under system crashes

13
Problem Solving vs. System Fighting
  • All participating teams struggled (1 month)
  • Middleware instabilities
  • Connectivity problems
  • Load balancing
  • But not the Ibis team
  • Winner (by far) in both categories
  • Note many Japanese teams with years of
    experience
  • Hardware, middleware, network, C-code, image
    data
  • Focus on problem solving, not system fighting
  • incl. opening of black-box C-code

14
Ibis Results Awards Prizes
1st Prize DACH 2008 - BS
1st Prize DACH 2008 - FT
AAAI-VC 2007 Most Visionary Research Award
WebPie A Web-Scale Parallel Inference Engine J.
Urbani, S. Kotoulas, J. Maassen, N. Drost, F.J.
Seinstra, F. van Harmelen, and H.E. Bal
1st Prize SCALE 2008
3rd Prize ISWC 2008
1st Prize SCALE 2010
  • Many domains data/compute intensive,
    real-time...
  • Winner Sustainability Award in the Enlighten Your
    Research (EYR) competition, 7 Dec. 2011 (Frank
    Seinstra)

15
Ibis Users
and many more
16
  • Jungle Computing

17
Jungle Computing (Frank Seinstra)
  • Worst case computing as required by end-users
  • Distributed
  • Heterogeneous
  • Hierarchical (incl. multi-/many-cores)

18
Why Jungle Computing?
  • Scientists often forced to use a wide variety of
    resources simultaneously to solve computational
    problems, e.g. due to
  • Desire for scalability
  • Distributed nature of (input) data
  • Software heterogeneity (e.g. mix of C/MPI and
    CUDA)
  • Ad hoc hardware availability
  • Energy consumption (use most energy-efficient
    resource)
  • Note most users do not need worst case jungle
  • Ibis aims to apply to any subset

19
Example Application Domains
  • Computational Astrophysics (Leiden)
  • AMUSE multi-model / multi-kernel simulations
  • Simulating the Universe on an Intercontinental
    Grid - Portegies Zwart et al (IEEE Computer, Aug
    2010)
  • Climate Modeling (Utrecht)
  • CPL multi-model / multi-kernel simulations
  • Atmosphere, ocean, source rock formation,
    - hardware (potentially) very
    diverse - high resolution gt speed
    scalability -

20
  • Domain Example 1
  • Computational Astrophysics

21
Domain Example 1 Computational Astrophysics
Demonstrated live at SC11, Nov 12-18, 2011,
Seattle, USA
22
Domain Example 1 Computational Astrophysics
  • The AMUSE system (Leiden University)
  • Early Star Cluster Evolution, including gas
  • Gravitational dynamics (N-body) GPU /
    GPU-cluster
  • Stellar evolution Beowulf cluster /
    Cloud
  • Hydro-dynamics, Radiative transport
    Supercomputer

gravitational dynamics
AMUSE
hydro-dynamics
stellar evolution
radiative transport
23
Domain Example 1 Computational Astrophysics
Demonstrated live at SC11, Nov 12-18, 2011,
Seattle, USA
24
  • Domain Example 2
  • Multimedia Content Analysis

25
Multimedia Content Analysis (MMCA)
  • Aim
  • Automatic extraction of semantic concepts from
    image sets and video streams
  • Depending on specific problem size of data set
  • May take hours, days, weeks, months, years

26
Multimedia Content Analysis (MMCA)
  • Applications in (a.o)
  • Remote Sensing
  • Security / Surveillance
  • Medical Imaging
  • Document Analysis
  • Multimedia Systems
  • Astronomy
  • Application types
  • Real-time vs. off-line
  • Fine-grained vs. coarse-grained
  • Data-intensive / compute-intensive /
    information-intensive

27
Domain Example 2 Color-based Object Recognition
by a Grid-connected Robot Dog
Seinstra et al (IEEE Multimedia, Oct-Dec
2007) Seinstra et al (AAAI07 Most Visionary
Research Award)
28
Successful
  • but many fundamental problems unsolved!
  • Scaling up to very large systems
  • Platform independence
  • Middleware independence
  • Connectivity (a.o. firewalls, )
  • Fault-tolerance
  • Software support tool(s) urgently needed!
  • Jungle-aware transparent efficient
  • No progress until discovery of Ibis

29
  • The Ibis Software Framework

30
The Ibis Software Framework
  • Offers all functionality to efficiently
    transparently implement run Jungle Computing
    applications
  • Designed for dynamic / hostile environments
  • Modular and flexible
  • Allow replacement of Ibis components by external
    ones, including native code
  • Open source
  • Download http//www.cs.vu.nl/ibis/

31
Ibis Design
  • Applications need functionality for
  • Programming (as in programming languages)
  • Deployment (as in operating systems)

32
Ibis Software Stack
33
JavaGAT
  • Java Grid Application Toolkit
  • High-level API for developing (Grid) applications
    independently of the underlying (Grid) middleware
  • Use (Grid) services file cp, resource discovery,
    job submission,
  • Developed in EU GridLab project
  • Thilo Kielmann, Rob van Nieuwpoort
  • SAGA API standardized by OGF
  • Simple API for Grid Applications (a.o. with LSU)
  • SAGA on top of JavaGAT

34
Zorilla
  • A prototype P2P middleware
  • A Zorilla system consists of a collection of
    nodes, connected by a P2P network
  • Each node independent implements all middleware
    functionality
  • No central components
  • Supports fault-tolerance and malleability
  • Easily combines resources in multiple
    administrative domains

35
IbisDeploy
36
Ibis Portability Layer (IPL)
  • Java-centric run-anywhere communication library
  • Sent along with your application
  • MPI for the Grid
  • Supports fault-tolerance and malleability
  • Resource tracking (Join-Elect-Leave model)
  • Open-world / Closed world
  • Efficient
  • Highly optimized object serialization
  • Can use optimized native libraries (e.g. MPI,
    Infiniband)

37
SmartSockets
  • Robust connection setup
  • Always connection in 30 different scenarios

Problems Firewalls Network Address Translation
(NAT) Non-routed networks Multi-homing
38
Ibis Programming Models
  • IPL-based programming models, a.o.
  • Satin
  • A divide-and-conquer model
  • MPJ
  • The MPI binding for Java
  • RMI
  • Object-Oriented remote Procedure Call
  • Jorus
  • A user transparent parallel model for
    multimedia applications

39
  • The 3 Common Uses of Ibis

40
Ibis as Master Key (or Passepartout)
  • Use JavaGAT to access any system
  • Develop/run applications independently of
    available middlewares
  • JavaGAT adaptors required for each middleware
  • Intelligent dispatching even allows for
    transparent use of multiple middlewares
  • Example file copy
  • JavaGAT vs. Globus
  • Simple, portable,
  • SAGA API standardized

41
Ibis as Glue
  • Use IPL SmartSockets, generally for wide-area
    communication
  • Linking up separate activities of an
    application
  • Activities often largely independent tasks
    implemented in any popular language or model
    (e.g. C/MPI, CUDA, Fortran, Java)
  • Each typically running on a single
    GPU/node/Cluster/Cloud/
  • Automatically circumvent connectivity problems
  • Example

With SmartSockets
No SmartSockets
42
Ibis as HPC Solution
  • Use Ibis as replacement for e.g. C/MPI code
  • Benefits
  • (better) portability
  • malleability (open world)
  • fault-tolerance
  • (run-time) task migration
  • Downside
  • requires recoding
  • Comparable speedups

43
MMCA Situation in 2004/2005
SSH
Parallel Horus Client


Parallel Horus Server
Sockets SSH Tunneling
Parallel Horus Client
C/MPI
  • Code pre-installed at each cluster site
  • Instable / faulty communication
  • Connectivity problems
  • Execution on each cluster by hand

44
Phase 1 Ibis as Master Key (2006)
JavaGAT IbisDeploy
Parallel Horus Client


Parallel Horus Server
Sockets SSH Tunneling
Parallel Horus Client
C/MPI
  • Code pre-installed at each cluster site
  • Instable / faulty communication
  • Connectivity problems
  • Execution on each cluster by hand

45
Phase 2 Ibis as Glue (2006/2007)
JavaGAT IbisDeploy
Parallel Horus Client


Parallel Horus Server
IPL SmartSockets
Parallel Horus Client
C/MPI
  • Code pre-installed at each cluster site
  • Instable / faulty communication
  • Connectivity problems
  • Execution on each cluster by hand

46
Phase 3 Ibis as HPC Solution (2008)
JavaGAT IbisDeploy
Parallel Jorus Client


Parallel Jorus Server
IPL SmartSockets
Parallel Jorus Client
Ibis/Java
  • Code pre-installed at each cluster site
  • Instable / faulty communication
  • Connectivity problems
  • Execution on each cluster by hand

47
Master Key Glue HPC
  • Step-wise conversion to 100 Ibis / Java
  • Phase 1 JavaGAT as Master Key
  • Phase 2 IPL SmartSockets as Glue
  • Phase 3 Ibis as HPC Solution
  • After each phase a fully functional, working
    solution was available!
  • Eventual result
  • wall-socket computing from a memory stick
  • Remember the Promise of the Grid?
  • Awards at AAAI 2007 and CCGrid 2008

48
  • Some current work

49
Other current PhD projects using Ibis
  • Distributed reasoning over semantic web data
  • WebPIE Parallel reasoner on Web scale
  • Written in Java, uses Hadoop (MapReduce)
  • Graph applications (HiPG)
  • E.g. for bioinformatics applications
  • http//www.graph500.org/
  • Games distributed model checking
  • Deal with large state space
  • GreenClouds
  • Distributed smart phone applications

50
Green Clouds
  • NWO Smart Energy Systems project with Univ. of
    Amsterdam (Cees de Laat) SARA
  • How to map high-performance applications onto
    hybrid distributed computing system, taking both
    performance energy consumption into account
  • System-level approach to reduce HPC energy
    consumption

51
DAS-4 infrastructure for Green IT
UvA/MultimediaN (16/36)
Dual quad-core Xeon E5620 Various accelerators
(GPUs, multicores, .) Scientific Linux Built by
ClusterVision
VU (74)
SURFnet6
ASTRON (23)
10 Gb/s lambdas
TU Delft (32)
Leiden (16)
52
Main ideas
  • Adapt resources to application needs dynamically,
    accounting for computational energy efficiency
  • Using Ibis malleability support
  • Exploit hardware diversity
  • Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) have much higher
    FLOPS/Watt for many applications
  • Use optical and photonic networks
  • Build a knowledge base semantic infrastructure
    description

53
Computation Offloading Framework
  • Runs on Android, integrates with Eclipse
  • Multiple implementations of compute intensive
    parts
  • Remote and local implementation bundled together
  • Deals with network connectivity issues (Ibis
    SmartSockets)

54
Computation Offloading
Remote
Activity
Stub
Proxy
Local
55
Conclusions
  • Ibis enables problem solving (avoids system
    fighting)
  • Successfully applied in many domains
  • Astronomy, multimedia analysis, climate modeling,
    remote sensing, semantic web,
    medical imaging,
  • Data intensive, compute intensive, real-time
  • Open source, download
  • www.cs.vu.nl/ibis/

56
Conclusions (2)
  • Jungle Computing is hard
  • High-Performance Jungle Computing even harder
  • While research into efficient green
    Jungle-aware programming models has only just
    begun
  • Ibis provides the basic functionality to
    efficiently transparently overcome most Jungle
    Computing complexities

57
Acknowledgements
  • Ceriel Jacobs
  • Roelof Kemp
  • Timo van Kessel
  • Thilo Kielmann
  • Ela Krepska
  • Maarten van Meersbergen
  • Rob van Nieuwpoort
  • Nick Palmer
  • Kees van Reeuwijk
  • Jacopo Urbani
  • Kees Verstoep
  • Ben van Werkhoven
  • Gosia Wrzesinska
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com