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GISELA and CLARA contribution to e-Science in Latin America Jesús Cruz Guzman (UNAM)

GISELA and CLARA contribution to e-Science in Latin America Jesús Cruz Guzman (UNAM) on behalf of B. Marechal (CETA-CIEMAT) ISUM’ 2012, 14 th -16 th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico). Outline. EELA & EELA-2 GISELA CLARA & NRENs. EELA & EELA-2 objectives. EELA-2 (04/2008 – 03/2010)

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GISELA and CLARA contribution to e-Science in Latin America Jesús Cruz Guzman (UNAM)

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  1. GISELA and CLARA contribution to e-Science in Latin America Jesús Cruz Guzman (UNAM) on behalf of B. Marechal (CETA-CIEMAT) ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  2. Outline • EELA & EELA-2 • GISELA • CLARA & NRENs ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  3. EELA & EELA-2 objectives • EELA-2 (04/2008 – 03/2010) • Provide an empowered Grid Facility with versatile services fulfilling application requirements • Ensure production quality services • Ensure the long term sustainability of the e-Infrastructure beyond the term of the project • Expand the current EELA e-Infrastructure • Look for new communities outside academia (Industry and Business) EELA (01/2006 – 12/2007) • Build a bridge between consolidated e-Infrastructure initiatives in Europe and emerging ones in Latin American • Create a collaboration network to deploy a large portfolio of scientific applications on a well supported Pilot Test-bed • Care in parallel of the training in grid technologies and of the knowledge dissemination and outreach ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico) 3

  4. Platform for all kinds of Applications / VRCs EELA-2 ended up supporting 61 Applications from 78 Institutions VRCs LA User Communities, typically 1-2 Institution group(s), alone or collaborating with a few Institutions. A few largeVRCs from Life Sciences (e.g. WeNMR, Biomed), Earth Sciences (WRF4G, Seismic simulations) and HEP (Auger, LHC expts) More than 200 scientific contacts in LA e.g. CLARA surveyed communities ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico) 4

  5. The evolution … --31/08/2012 GISELA --01/09/2010 --31/03/2010 GISELA: 34 production applications inherited from EELA / EELA-2 represent potential communities • 18 Resources Centres provide skilful personnel to support and develop services in the region • 435 trained users / 73 inst. • 1794 cores platform • Operation 24/7 EELA-2 --01/04/2008 --31/12/2007 EELA GISELA e-Infrastructure inherited from EELA and EELA-2 --01/01/2006 ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  6. The GISELA Consortium 15 Countries (11 in Latin America) 19 Partners (14 in Latin America) 12 Third Parties (9 in Latin America) • UPORTO Third Party • Uminho • UNIANDES Third Parties • UIS • PUJ • CNRS Third Parties • CPPM • IPGP • UNAM Third Parties • CICESE • ITESM • IPN-CIC • UNISON • REUNA Third Parties • UFRO • UTFSM UFRJ Third Party • CEFET-RJ ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico) 6 6

  7. GISELA Objectives and Work plan Objective1: Ensure the long- term sustainability of the e-Infrastructure in the Latin American continent Objective 2: Provide full support to the Virtual Research Communities spanning Latin America and Europe, using the e-Infrastructure. • Work plan: • Implement a sustainability model rooted on National Grid Initiatives (NGI), in association with CLARA, Latin American NRENs and collaborating with EGI. • Provide the communities with the suited e-Infrastructure and Application-related Services required to improve the effectiveness of their research. This will address both: • The current EELA-2 User Communitieswhose research investigations are carried out at the Institution level or in small collaborations. • The larger Virtual Research Communitiesas Life & Earth Sciences, HEP ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico) 7

  8. Year 1 Year 2 Pledge Powerful e-Infrastructure in Latin America “Extra” resources for the prod.vo.eu-eela.eu VO ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico) 8

  9. Grid Services Replicating Networking Services • In CLARA’s network activities a Regional Network Operation Centre (RNOC) catches the functions of the countries that have no domestic NOC • When domestic network infrastructures grow, the NRENs are going to be able to install their own NOC • Once this happens, the RNOC will transfer the domestic networking functions to the NOC that has been installed • CLARA auctions, among its members NRENs the operation of the regional NOC every four years • The Grid pioneer Infrastructure could follow the same model • Those countries that can support the creation of a GOC (Grid Operation Centre) will have one, and those who cannot afford it or are not mature enough to create one, can use the Regional Grid Operation Centre (GSC) • Domestic GOCs are responsible for their domestic services and interact with the ROC when services have a regional scope • Those countries without a GOC, will use the ROC for domestic functions in their country. ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  10. CLARA Advanced Computing Services • Adv. Comp. (AC) Expertise Transfer. Technical Consulting to assist in house applications • Customising an existing application to profit the existing Adv. Comp. e-Infrastructure • Developing in house new applications required by the customer organisation (Research, Industry or NREN) • SDK/SourceFourge TrainingTo increase the awareness on the AC environments • Wizard for basic applications.Allows the less expert users and/or NREN to install their applications • Federated Authentication Resources. Grant authorized access to use the federated resources at a continental scale • Application ShelfService: Application ShelfAllows users, industrial partner and/or NREN to contract computing resources • Virtual Resources Grid Allocation. Virtual services e-Infrastructure, such as: • Allocation of AC resources allowing the member institutions to configure AC environments (cores/storage/network provisioning) and elements needed to execute their applications • Running Services records, tracking the processes submitted to the e-infrastructure • Data Preservation Services. Offer the possibility to store their data for a period of time • Training and Capacity Building Service. To increases the usage and the culture of Advanced Computing Services by providing people the information and the skills needed to access the AC Services ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  11. CLARA Grid VRC Organisational Model CLARA APPLICATIONS MANAGER NETWORK MANAGER (NSC) Grid Community Coordinator Regional GOC+GOC Regional NOC+NOC GOC NOC NGI or EDGS NGI or EDGS GOC Country LA–1 REUNA Country LA–N NOC NGI or EDGS Country LA–2 Complex Model Cooperative Broker Model ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  12. A Regional Cooperative Solution Offers ScienceGateway Virtual Instruments Virtual Servers Grid Cloud • On demand resources (Hardware, Software & Manware) from the research groups to the research groups • High bandwidth and low latency from the Experimental academic advanced Networks • Replicating other services in the RedCLARA Operational Structure • Added value to the existent infrastructure • Better use of the existent computational infrastructure and expertise from different countries • Promoting local middleware solutions better suited for the region Commercial Providers User Authentication ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  13. Science Gateway Service Centric Model ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  14. Regional Competitive Solution ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  15. SERVUCTION & Operational Profit • First and Second year of operation after GISELA end (31/08/2012 →) • ½ FTE for administrative purposes as contracts, bills and expenditures • ½ FTE for technical support • 1 FTE fore marketing and sales • Third year (1 FTE - Administrative, 1 FTE - Technical, and 1 FTE – sales) Fixed Costs ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  16. Action Plan (1/3) Raise awareness, sensitize and inform on the different opportunities of the Advanced Services • Sensitizing and informing research communities of the opportunities that Advanced Services could bring to their environment • Organize Virtual Days on Technology and the Community • Organize courses and competencies for students who have applications of general use • Document the existing applications of the GISElA Science Gateway, by creating tutorials to ease the use and appropriation. • Raise awareness, sensitize and inform the decision makers of S & T and the Directors of the National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) on the opportunities that Advanced Computing Services could bring to Science and Technology • Interviews with Latin American high authorities of decision makers in Science and Technology. CLARA’s Academic Manager is coordinating interviews with decision makers (Ministers, Directors and General Secretaries) of S&T in the LA region ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  17. Action Plan(2/3) Identify the real needs of Advanced Computing Services by research communities. It is necessary to understand real needs of advanced computing services in the LA region. The communities need to produce a positive social impact in their research results in order to attract the S&T decision makers’ and NRENs Directors’ attention • Identify communities that produce research results with high positive social impact as potential users of advanced computing services • Identify “ambassadors” of each community to conduct a series of actions to first understand the communities’ needs and then to induce the communities into advanced computing services  Increase technical potentialities and capacities of the GISELA Science Gateway to provide an easy and friendly interface that can be used to access different web services through different platforms ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  18. Action Plan (3/3) Train research communities so they adopt the GISELA Science Gateway into their daily research. Communities need to be able to build and maintain their own portals and include all the applications they need to develop research projects • Creation of a Task Force (in collaboration with EPIKH) to implement and give technical support to applications running in the GISELA Science Gateway environment. • Deploy applications of communities with social impact: seismology and climate • Install Identity Federation Systems in at least two countries of the Latin American region • Document extensively the processes of adaptation and configuration of the GISELA Science Gateway • Redefine the web interface and usability of the portal • Create on line and detailed technical documentation to have a permanent reference for the Task Force professionals and local technical representatives of the different institutions involved in the e-infrastructure and resource centers. • Create a AuthN &AuthZ Infrastructure (AAI) in Latin America based on federated indentity services, "cloning & adapting" the existing "catch all" services developed at INFN Catania • Update of the CP/CPS documents of the Certification Authorities established in Latin America to allow them issue "robot certificates" that are necessary for the GISELA Science Gateway • Organise a cycle of technical seminars to follow up of the installation of applications ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  19. Conclusions (1/2) • The service architecture based on GISELA SG centric model includes all possible services to be offered by RedCLARA • The cooperative shared cost broker model is economically viable and competitive with the present commercial offer • It has been validated with the • Directors on NRENs at the RedCLARA Assembly (Oct 27th, 2011) • Need to be explained to the S&T Agencies • Need to be aligned with National Initiatives • Good idea: 30% National capacity to be share regional + Funds for RC • Need to be related with other EU projects (RISC, CHAIN, ProIdeal) • Application Committee (Nov 18th, 2011) • Need to allow the possibility to “credit cores” for research projects • Need to allow possibility to offer 5% financed resources for good proposals with no funding opportunities ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

  20. Conclusions (2/2) • RedCLARA Assembly (Nov 10th, 2011) and RedCLARA Board Meeting (Dec 2nd , 2011) recommended to: • Evaluate the cost/performance of the GISELA e-Infrastructure • Convince two or three candidates to start/test the model • Look for funding for the test period (~2 years) • Develop a LA Call for a Science Gateway Task Force • Training at LA and EU technical people from VE, CO, PE, MX, EC • F2F meeting and workshop at the Joint GISELA-CHAIN Conference • Aggressive plan to interact with LA Science & Technology Agencies (AR, CL, MX, PE, EC, CO, VE) • Marketing strategy aiming to VRC and ComCLARA Communities • CLARA Market Study for Cloud Services for standard computing services ISUM’ 2012, 14th -16th March 2012 - Guanajuato (Mexico)

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