We describe a relatively new effort within CMS to converge on a set of web based tools, using state of the art industry techniques, to engage with the CMS offline computing system. CMS collaborators require tools to monitor various components of the computing system and interact with the system itself. The current state of the various CMS web tools is described along side current planned developments. The CMS collaboration comprises of nearly 3000 people from all over the world. As well as its collaborators, its computing resources are spread all over globe and are accessed via the LHC grid to run analysis, large scale production and data transfer tasks. Due to the distributed nature of collaborators effective provision of collaborative tools is essential to maximise physics exploitation of the CMS experiment, especially when the size of the CMS data set is considered. CMS has chosen to provide such tools over the world wide web as a top level service, enabling all members of the collaboration to interact with the various offline computing components. Traditionally web interfaces have been added in HEP experiments as an afterthought. In the CMS offline we have decided to put web interfaces, and the development of a common CMS web framework, on an equal footing with the rest of the offline development. Tools exist within CMS to transfer and catalogue data (PhEDEx and DBS/DLS), run Monte Carlo production (ProdAgent) and submit analysis (CRAB). Effective human interfaces to these systems are required for users with different agendas and practical knowledge of the systems to effectively use the CMS computing system. The CMS web tools project aims to provide a consistent interface to all these tools.

CMS offline web tools / S. Metson; S. Belforte; B. Bockelman; K. Dziedziniewicz; R. Egeland; P. Elmer; G. Eulisse; D. Evans; A. Fanfani; D. Feichtinger; C. Kavka; V. Kuznetsov; F. vanLingen; D. Newbold; L. Tuura; S. Wakefield. - In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICS. CONFERENCE SERIES. - ISSN 1742-6596. - ELETTRONICO. - 119:(2008), pp. 082007-082012. (Intervento presentato al convegno Internaltional Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP) tenutosi a Victoria,Canada nel 2-7 September 2007).

CMS offline web tools

FANFANI, ALESSANDRA;
2008

Abstract

We describe a relatively new effort within CMS to converge on a set of web based tools, using state of the art industry techniques, to engage with the CMS offline computing system. CMS collaborators require tools to monitor various components of the computing system and interact with the system itself. The current state of the various CMS web tools is described along side current planned developments. The CMS collaboration comprises of nearly 3000 people from all over the world. As well as its collaborators, its computing resources are spread all over globe and are accessed via the LHC grid to run analysis, large scale production and data transfer tasks. Due to the distributed nature of collaborators effective provision of collaborative tools is essential to maximise physics exploitation of the CMS experiment, especially when the size of the CMS data set is considered. CMS has chosen to provide such tools over the world wide web as a top level service, enabling all members of the collaboration to interact with the various offline computing components. Traditionally web interfaces have been added in HEP experiments as an afterthought. In the CMS offline we have decided to put web interfaces, and the development of a common CMS web framework, on an equal footing with the rest of the offline development. Tools exist within CMS to transfer and catalogue data (PhEDEx and DBS/DLS), run Monte Carlo production (ProdAgent) and submit analysis (CRAB). Effective human interfaces to these systems are required for users with different agendas and practical knowledge of the systems to effectively use the CMS computing system. The CMS web tools project aims to provide a consistent interface to all these tools.
2008
082007
082012
CMS offline web tools / S. Metson; S. Belforte; B. Bockelman; K. Dziedziniewicz; R. Egeland; P. Elmer; G. Eulisse; D. Evans; A. Fanfani; D. Feichtinger; C. Kavka; V. Kuznetsov; F. vanLingen; D. Newbold; L. Tuura; S. Wakefield. - In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICS. CONFERENCE SERIES. - ISSN 1742-6596. - ELETTRONICO. - 119:(2008), pp. 082007-082012. (Intervento presentato al convegno Internaltional Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP) tenutosi a Victoria,Canada nel 2-7 September 2007).
S. Metson; S. Belforte; B. Bockelman; K. Dziedziniewicz; R. Egeland; P. Elmer; G. Eulisse; D. Evans; A. Fanfani; D. Feichtinger; C. Kavka; V. Kuznetsov; F. vanLingen; D. Newbold; L. Tuura; S. Wakefield
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/62299
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