LHC Computing Grid Project

Project Execution Board

Notes of the meeting of Tuesday December 2, 2003

Draft Version 6, 5/DEC/2003

 

Present:

Dario Barberis, Ian Bird, Marco Cattaneo, Philippe Charpentier; Chris Eck, Frédéric Hemmer, Bob Jones, Matthias Kasemann, Jürgen Knobloch, Alberto Masoni, Mirco Mazzucato, Les Robertson, David Stickland, Torre Wenaus, Federico Carminati

Phone: Tony Doyle, Francois Etienne

 

Apologies: Nick Brook, Bernd Panzer, Dave Foster

 

Minutes of last meetings and matters arising

The minutes of the meetings on the 4th and 11th November have been accepted without change.

 

Main points from recent reviews

Les and the application managers present gave their first impressions, main points and action items after the internal and LHCC reviews of the LCG project.

Applications area (Torre Wenaus)

Torre based his presentation on the last slide of his PPT-presentation.

  • A new LCG-ROOT relationship is being discussed. While in the blueprint RTAG, the connection was called “user/provider relationship”, a more integrated collaboration is considered now. To start, a concrete plan on a common dictionary as well as a joint proposal on mathematical libraries has been discussed in the Architects Forum. René will present at a next applications area meeting a proposal for further steps in this direction.
  • The integration support will be improved by establishing more developer-experiment associations.
  • The EP/SFT group plans to establish with priority a central librarian for all application area projects.
  • For the “in-house” developments, SCRAM as well as CMT configurations will be supported.
  • POOL support for ROOT schema evolution will be developed and demonstrated within a few months.
  • SEAL take-up by the experiments will be fostered.
  • A plan for the generic simulation frameworks has been developed in the Architects Forum (AA) and was supported by the internal review. It will start with FLUGG , a package that integrates the GEANT4 geometrical description into the FLUKA code. The Virtual Monte Carlo (VMC) will be evaluated later when ready.
  • The ARDA program is still a big question mark but will have significant impact on the applications area, in particular PI.

 

David Stickland for CMS launched some discussion on the decision-making process in the applications area, in particular on the role of the architects forum (AF).

He felt that the planned move towards a design, implementation and management as outlined in the LCG Blueprint should be made more visible in the planning of the ROOT team. CMS considers such a move vital if we are to consider any real change in the LCG/ROOT relationship as outlined above. CMS recognizes the difficulty for ROOT to make such changes given the maturity of the product and is thus concerned that the proposed change of relationship may be very difficult to achieve.

CMS was surprised by the decision to develop a third build tool, APWORK, rather than make use of either SCRAM or CMT. The process of making this decision is quite unclear to CMS.

While CMS welcomes the work to enable LHC experiments to use FLUGG in test-beam examples to give insight on the GEANT4/FLUKA differences/features, they do not currently have an interest in a common geometry modeller such as the VMC – they also made this clear in the RTAG 9/10. CMS does, however, have an interest in an exchange geometry description, to which experiments and software providers should develop appropriate interfaces to their internal models.

David stressed that any work starting in the applications area must have the commitment of a quorum of the LHC experiments with integration milestones at an appropriate time-scale. He requests that the decision-making process in the AA be strengthened with clearly defined decisions and explicit experiment commitments.

Torre was surprised that the process of the AF was not clear. He said that after a decision in the AF, preliminary notes were distributed to the experiments and sufficient time for feedback was given. The detailed notes and decisions of the AF are made publicly available from the AA web-site.

The representatives of the other experiments in the PEB felt that the current decision making process for the applications area was appropriate and was working to their satisfaction. – It should of course be made sure that the workplan and resources have to stay within the scope as defined by the SC2. It was recognized that with time priorities may change and that it was useful to go from time to time through the projects first in the AA and then providing a summary for the SC2.

Les proposed that as standing agenda item, Torre would report to the PEB major decisions taken in the AF. This proposal was endorsed. The PEB agenda plan, tabled later in the meeting, foresees two PEB meetings early next year to make a high level workplan and resources review of the AA.

 

Grid deployment area (Ian Bird)

Also Ian used the last slide of his PPT-presentation.

Concerning organisational matters, Ian proposed to introduce technical meetings of people doing the work also at the system manager level. Ian has taken measures to appoint the requested LCG security officer – initially ad interim. An important issue is to strengthen the collaboration between regional centres.

On the topic of installation, it is planned to remove dependencies between middleware components, to simplify the installation and to improve the certification testing. In order to achieve this and to guarantee proper support for another year, effort will be spent set up a proper build system and to break dependencies. This effort will be launched soon after deployment of LCG-2 and should initially be decoupled from the EGEE effort in order to react rapidly to the review.

General points (Les Robertson)

Les has written up his personal summary and major conclusions in a document.

One point the experiments have to think about is how the requirements for computing resources at CERN would be reviewed after the end of COCOTIME.

A major point was the question of collaboration of regional centres in the context of the GDB.

Unexpectedly, a point of LCG support for MC generator development was raised by a member of the LHCC (Michelangelo Mangano). We should investigate and react in a rather short time.

LCG-2 Preparation (Ian Bird) (transparencies)

The plan is to release LCG-2 by end of this week. The date has slipped from mid-November because of newly discovered major bugs and another POOL/RLS schema change. The goal is to deploy before the Christmas holidays expecting a consolidated stable LCG-2 in mid-January. Some components will this time still require re-installs.  It was emphasized by all that from now on in production mode backward compatibility was essential and must be ensured. From now on no more schema changes affecting the users will be accepted for LCG-2. Things may be different in the long term for major new middleware (i.e. replace for LCG-2).

The storage access will start with SRM-enabled storage elements offering packaged installations of Castor & dCache, where Castor is ready now and the dCache version is developed by RAL with the help of Fermilab. The latter is expected to be ready within two weeks. Storage access will not be distributed with LCG-2  but instructions and pointers will be provided.

GFAL has been tested at CERN and Fermilab and will be in the distribution together with a user guide and release notes.

With LCG-2 the distribution of experiment software has been separated from the middleware deployment.  LCG now provides the tools and mechanism for distributing experiment software but the responsibility now lies with the experiment software managers.

David Stickland emphasized the importance to have a stable environment where the experiments can install their software. Ian announced that a set of machines running LCG-2 different from the certification testbed will be available.

On a question of Federico on the support for MSS at regional centres, Ian said that all sites having SRM will be supported though at the time being there was no experience with the existing SRM interface to HPSS – tests will need to be done in Lyon and Brookhaven. Anyhow sites interesting to Alice such as KFK and Bologna are expected to be operational before Christmas.

 

PEB meeting schedule for the next few months (more information)

Les provided first ideas on the schedule of upcoming PEB meetings. Due to the lack of time this will be discussed further by email.

 

Roles & Mandate of the new PEB

Les went through a document he prepared on the composition and the roles of the new PEB.

After agreement in the PEB the document will be sent to the POB.

Federico provided a number of comments, corrections and additions most of which have been integrated into the document.

By the time these minutes are written, a new version of the document has been sent to the POB with copy to the PEB.

 

Some discussion went on concerning the respective roles of GDB, PEB and the experiments with respect to scheduling resources and planning of data challenges as well as the choice of middleware.

It was agreed that the technical bodies such as the security group, the architects forum etc. would make recommendations to be endorsed by GDB and PEB.

 

Planning for quarterly report Q4/2003

This time the quarterly report will be delivered to the SC2 by the end of January. The dates for the various steps in between will be discussed by email.

Next meetings

9 December 2003:

  • CERN resources for 2004
  • Arda – status of discussions

16 December 2003:

  • LCG take-up plans by the experiments

Jürgen Knobloch