کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
271321 | 504992 | 2012 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

The Center for Simulation of RF Wave Interactions with Magnetohydrodynamics (SWIM) Project is a proto-Fusion Simulation Program (FSP) whose goal is to study high-performance fusion plasmas and perform comprehensive simulations that are essential to the development of fusion. SWIM team members are geographically distributed and utilize distributed supercomputers for computational simulations. Due to the highly distributed computational work environment, the SWIM team has the difficulty of monitoring code runs and discovering historical runs. To alleviate this difficulty a web-based monitoring portal has been developed and deployed.The monitoring portal tracks the progress of simulations and automatically collects metadata in real-time. This capability helps scientists to effectively utilize precious computer resources. Furthermore, the portal provides a web-based interface for post-run analysis, such as visualizing the results, logging the user comments, and rating the simulation quality. The user interface provides rapid discovery capability via multi-field searching and sorting.The development of the monitoring portal used open source software, such as Python, Django, MySQL, and Apache. It uses MDSplus for data management, Memcached for data caches, and OpenID for single sign-on security.This paper describes the software architecture, related technologies and deployment experiences of the monitoring portal.
► We designed a web-based monitoring system that tracks the status of fusion simulations.
► Our system is scalable to monitor the simulations running on distributed supercomputers and clusters located at multiple geographical locations.
► The monitoring portal provides a web-based interface for post-run analysis, such as visualizing the results, logging the user comments, and rating the simulation quality.
► Our system utilizes the open source software, such as Python, Django, MySQL, Apache, and MDSplus.
Journal: Fusion Engineering and Design - Volume 87, Issue 12, December 2012, Pages 2052–2056