using an end-to-end demonstration in an undergraduate grid computing course

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Mark A. Holliday and James Ruff, Dept of Mathematics and Computer Science Western Carolina University Barry Wilkinson Dept of Computer Science UNC at Charlotte. ACMSE 2006 Melbourne, FL 12 March 2006. Using an End-To-End Demonstration in an Undergraduate Grid Computing Course. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Using an End-To-End Demonstration in an Undergraduate Grid Computing Course

Mark A. Holliday and James Ruff, Dept of Mathematics and Computer ScienceWestern Carolina University

Barry WilkinsonDept of Computer ScienceUNC at Charlotte

ACMSE 2006Melbourne, FL12 March 2006

12 March 20062

Acknowledgements

Thank-you for financial support from Introducing Grid Computing into the

Undergraduate Curriculum, National Science Foundation, DUE 0410667, 2004-2006.

A Consortium to Promote Computational Science and High Performance Computing, University of North Carolina Office of the President, 2004-2006.

12 March 20063

Overview

What is Grid Computing? Background on the Courses The End-to-End Demonstration Conclusions For Further Information

12 March 20064

What is Grid Computing?

Grid computing is"coordinated resource sharing and problem

solving in dynamic, multi-institutional virtual organizations" (Foster, Kesselman, and Tuecke, 2001)

12 March 20065

What is Grid Computing?

Other approaches to wide-area distributed systems have been progressing concurrently

The Grid approach is converging with the Web Services approach– HTTP, XML– SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol)– WSDL (Web Services Description Language)

12 March 20066

What is Grid Computing? (from Mark Baker, “Smoke and Mirrors: Tales of the Grid”, 28 October 2004)

Grid

Web

WSRF

OGSIGT2

GT1

HTTPWSDL, WS-*

WSDL 2, WSDM

12 March 20067

Background on the Courses

Grid computing has matured to the point that courses aimed at the undergraduate, upper-level computer science major are feasible and desirable

Two courses developed– Overview of Grid Computing– Intelligent Decision Making

• Using the Grid in an Application Domain

Both courses are multi-site

12 March 20068

Background on the Courses

Overview of Grid Computing course– Fall 2004 and Fall 2005– Instructors: Barry Wilkinson and Clayton Ferner

(UNCW)– 43/32 students at 8/9 universities

Intelligent Decision Making course– Spring 2005 and Spring 2006– Instructors: Mark Holliday, David Powell (Elon),

and Joel Hollingsworth (Elon)– 16/25 students at 3/6 universities

12 March 20069

Background on the Courses

12 March 200610

Background on the Courses

12 March 200611

The End-to-End Demonstration

Grids can be complex. It is easy to get lost in the details and

miss the overall picture. We need a simple, but complete,

example of a grid application. =>– End-to-End Demonstration

12 March 200612

The End-to-End Demonstration

Has all the parts of a realistic grid use grid portal user-developed grid service

– application grid client– application grid service

pre-defined grid service– remote job submission to multiple clusters

(across organization boundaries)– use computational and data resources on the

clusters

12 March 200613

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12 March 200617

Conclusions

Wide-area distributed systems with a foundation of HTTP and XML are developing and converging as web services and grids

Undergraduate courses for computer science majors in this area are becoming feasible and desirable

The End-to-End Demonstration is a useful resource for illustrating how a grid can be used in a simple but realistic manner

12 March 200618

For Further Information

http://cs.wcu.edu/~certauthority More End-to-End Demonstration Information

– more detailed slides– explanatory handout

Grid Computing Course Materials Website

Contact:holliday@wcu.edu

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