Asosiy kontentga oʻtish
AkademIndex

Mahsulotlar

Ishlab chiquvchilar uchun

AkademBasetez oradaEkotizim uchun ochiq API
Lotin
Maqola

Towards next generations of software for distributed infrastructures: The European Middleware Initiative

Cristina AiftimieiNational Institute of Nuclear Physics INFNA AimarEuropean Center for Nuclear Research, CERNAndrea CeccantiNational Institute of Nuclear Physics INFNMarco CecchiNational Institute of Nuclear Physics INFNAlberto Di MeglioEuropean Center for Nuclear Research, CERNFlorida EstrellaEuropean Center for Nuclear Research, CERNPatrick FuhrmamGerman Electron Synchrotron, DESYE. GiorgioNational Institute of Nuclear Physics INFNB. KónyaInstitute of Physics, Lund UniversityLaurence FieldEuropean Center for Nuclear Research, CERNJon Kerr NilsenDepartment of Physics, University of OsloMorris RiedelJ. WhiteHelsinki Institute of Physics
2012en
ABI

Annotatsiya

The last two decades have seen an exceptional increase of the available networking, computing and storage resources. Scientific research communities have exploited these enhanced capabilities developing large scale collaborations, supported by distributed infrastructures. In order to enable usage of such infrastructures, several middleware solutions have been created. However such solutions, having been developed separately, have been resulting often in incompatible middleware and infrastructures. The European Middleware Initiative (EMI) is a collaboration, started in 2010, among the major European middleware providers (ARC, dCache, gLite, UNICORE), aiming to consolidate and evolve the existing middleware stacks, facilitating their interoperability and their deployment on large distributed infrastructures, establishing at the same time a sustainable model for the future maintenance and evolution of the middleware components. This paper presents the strategy followed for the achievements of these goals : after an analysis of the situation before EMI, it is given an overview of the development strategy, followed by the most notable technical results, grouped according to the four development areas (Compute, Data, Infrastructure, Security). The rigorous process ensuring the quality of provided software is then illustrated, followed by a description the release process, and of the relations with the user communities. The last section provides an outlook to the future, focusing on the undergoing actions looking toward the sustainability of activities.

Mavzular

Identifikatorlar

Iqtiboslar va manbalar

Koʻrsatkichlar — AkademScholar · Tez orada