| Media
Contacts:
Scott Yates, MCNC,
919/248-1907
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Jan.
6, 2004
Scientists
Develop Technology to Enable High-Performance Computing
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
An
optical network provisioning protocol to enable more
efficient computing applications has been successfully
demonstrated by scientists at MCNC Research & Development
Institute and North Carolina State University.
The
demonstration of the Just-in-Time (JIT) protocol for
provisioning and managing light path connections in
the all-optical Advanced Technology Demonstration Network
(ATDnet) in Washington, D.C., confirmed the viability
of user-initiated, ultra-fast provisioning of all-optical
network connections and marked the transition of the
JIT protocol from the laboratory to an operational network.
The light paths linked host systems at the U.S. Department
of Defense’s Laboratory for Telecommunications
Sciences, the Naval Research Laboratory’s Center
for Computational Science and the Defense Intelligence
Agency.
An
overview of the JIT protocol was presented in December
at the Globecom 2003 conference’s Optical Networking
and Systems Symposium in San Francisco by Dan Stevenson,
vice president of MCNC-RDI’s Advanced Network
Research Division.
JIT
will provide much needed support to U.S. military and
civilian researchers to solve real-world problems. In
particular, the Naval Research Laboratory is interested
in the protocol’s ability to quickly set up and
release tens, possibly hundreds, of gigabits of bandwidth
for demanding, high-performance computing applications
such as immersive real-time visualization of satellite
imagery, computational fluid dynamics, ocean and weather
modeling, and space physics.
“JIT
addresses some very challenging problems in high-performance
computing,” said Dr. Hank Dardy, chief scientist
for advanced computing at the Naval Research Laboratory’s
Center for Computational Science. “It can take
weeks to establish an optical connection through a carrier
network, and minutes to do so with generalized multi-protocol
label switching, the current industry standard. With
JIT, we can provision optical connections between sites
in a few milliseconds through our microelectromechanical
switches, and in a few microseconds when we deploy faster
photonic switches.”
The
JIT architecture and protocols used in the ATDnet were
jointly developed by researchers at MCNC and NC State’s
Dr. Paul Franzon, professor of electrical and computer
engineering; Dr. Harry Perros, professor of computer
science; and Dr. George Rouskas, professor of computer
science. The research was partially funded by NASA and
supported by the Advanced Research and Development Activity,
a Department of Defense research and development community
for the development of information technologies that
current networks, including today’s Internet,
do not or cannot support.
“This
is the first deployment of its kind in an operational
network at greater than gigabit speeds,” Stevenson
said. “JIT is especially attractive to government
customers because it doesn’t necessarily care
about data rate or data format, not even whether the
signal is digital or analog. Also, it works with commercial,
off-the-shelf equipment from multiple vendors and multiple
optical switching technologies.”
Fast,
real-time resource provisioning will enable the military,
particle physics, and research communities to focus
on problems in new ways. Stevenson said that JIT overcomes
many limitations and problems inherent with the current
Internet. Applications can request, use and release
bandwidth when needed, without tying up an optical circuit
for days.
“High-speed,
on-demand, application-initiated provisioning of bandwidth
is also what the grid computing community is demanding,”
Stevenson said. Grids connect heterogeneous computing
platforms so that they operate, and appear to the user,
as a single computing system. This means that computational
problems can be directed to a system within the grid
that will process it in the quickest and most cost effective
manner. Grid computing provides users with unprecedented
computing power, services and information, combing the
resources of heterogeneous computing resources no matter
where they are located.
“Grid
resource requirements of big science applications, such
as particle physics, are very dynamic,” said Stevenson.
“The goal for sparse networks like ATDnet, and
the recently announced National Lamda Rail, is to share
grid bandwidth the same way you share computing cycles
and storage in the grid. You also want to use those
resources efficiently. These applications often involve
computational steering and cannot afford the latency
associated with electronic routers. The applications
may require 300 megabits per second, but that’s
only a small percentage of a 10-gigabit optical channel.
JIT lets you share the remaining 97 percent of that
bandwidth with others on the grid without the reduced
performance inherent with electronic routing.”
MCNC
and the University of North Carolina 16-campus system
are jointly developing a statewide grid computing network
for North Carolina’s higher education community
using the existing statewide North Carolina Research
and Education Network, operated by MCNC. The statewide
research and education grid will link computing and
data resources from multiple institutions in multiple
locations with the potential to vastly increase the
resources available to individual institutions. When
complete, North Carolina will be one of the first states
in the nation to deploy a statewide grid infrastructure.
“We
intend to move JIT into grid networks,” said Stevenson.
“We see the grid as a widely distributed computing
system, and optical networks as the backplane for that
system. We’re working on several supporting technologies
to make that happen, such as protocols for QoS-aware
routing, network management, transport, security and
authentication, and making JIT OGSI/OGSA (Open Grid
Services Infrastructure/Architecture) compliant. We’re
also developing JIT-aware network adaptors so that high
performance grid servers and hosts can take full advantage
of JIT.”
Stevenson
also sees other applications. “We believe that
JIT will scale to finer timescales, and will support
application-initiated provisioning of bandwidth for
optical burst switching where a connection is provisioned
in nanoseconds and may be released after only a few
milliseconds,” he said. Optical burst switching
is a high performance networking technology that transports
digital and analog data an order of magnitude faster
than today’s digital electronic packet switched
technologies.
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About
MCNC
MCNC is a private, independent, non-profit corporation
established in 1980 to advance technology-led economic
development and job creation throughout North Carolina.
MCNC Research & Development Institute develops new
technologies through its own initiatives and as a research
partner for the U.S. government, conducting advanced
and applied research across a broad technology spectrum,
including microsystems, flexible electronics, sensor
development, signal electronics, wireless systems, microfabrication,
high-speed secure networks and grid computing. MCNC
Grid Computing & Networking Services delivers advanced
communications resources statewide to more than 180
public and private institutions, including universities,
community colleges, K-12 schools, libraries, state government,
private research institutions and commercial businesses.
MCNC Ventures provides early-stage funding and assistance
to entrepreneurial start-up companies. The MCNC family
of companies is located in North Carolina’s Research
Triangle Park. For more information, please visit www.mcnc.org.
About
the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL)
The NRL is the corporate research laboratory for the
Navy and Marine Corps and conducts a broad program of
scientific research, technology and advanced development
directed toward maritime applications of new and improved
materials, techniques, equipment, systems, and ocean,
atmospheric, and space sciences and related technologies.
NRL has served the Navy and the nation for 80 years
and continues to meet the complex technological challenges
of today’s world. For more information, please
visit www.nrl.navy.mil/.
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