* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Slide 1
Wireless security wikipedia , lookup
Net neutrality law wikipedia , lookup
Deep packet inspection wikipedia , lookup
Computer network wikipedia , lookup
Distributed firewall wikipedia , lookup
Recursive InterNetwork Architecture (RINA) wikipedia , lookup
Zero-configuration networking wikipedia , lookup
Cracking of wireless networks wikipedia , lookup
Network tap wikipedia , lookup
Piggybacking (Internet access) wikipedia , lookup
Airborne Networking wikipedia , lookup
List of wireless community networks by region wikipedia , lookup
Lawrence H. Landweber National Science Foundation SC2003 November 20, 2003 [email protected] • QUESTION 2 Future Cyberinfrastructure • Built on broadly accessible, highly capable network: 100’s of Tbps backbones; • Significant distributed and varied computing resources: 100’s of petaflops in aggregate; • Significant storage capacity: exabyte collections common; • Allows wide range of sensors/effectors to be connected: sensor nets of millions of elements attached; • Contains a broad variety of intelligent visualization, search, database, programming and other services that are fitted to specific disciplines • The ETF or Extensible Terascale Facility is an early prototype Technical Challenges • How to build the components? • Networks, processors, storage devices, sensors, software • How to shape the technical architecture? • Pervasive, many cyberinfrastructures, constantly evolving/changing capabilities • How to customize CI to particular S&E domains Shared vs. Special Networks • Determine application’s networking requirements including tradeoffs (e.g., cost vs. full or approximate satisfaction of requirements). • Determine whether requirements can be satisfied (modulo tradeoffs) on shared network. • If not, determine characteristics of network that would satisfy application's requirements. • Use an available network with these characteristics. • If no such network available, – map characteristics to a network technology and – implement the target network or some acceptable approximation. • These are hard problems, not easily answerable for complex applications and networks. Research Opportunities • Develop methodology for mapping applications to required networks or approximations of networks. • Important because not all apps need (or can financially justify) special networks. Selecting the target network is not easy. • There are research opportunities in this area for collaboration between mathematicians, computer scientists and scientists. • QUESTION 5 Next Generation Network Projects • NSF: ITR Projects – OptIPuter – 100 Mbps to 100 Million Homes • NSF: Extensible Terascale Facility • National Lambda Rail 100 Mbps to 100 Million Homes • NSF Funded Research Project (10/03) - $7.5M • Stanford, Berkeley, CMU, Rice, Fraser Research, Internet2 • Scope – – – – – Economics Access Metropolitan area Backbone Protocols • Requires a redesign of the access, metropolitan and backbone networks of the Internet • Applications? Extensible Terascale Facility • Resource providers (currently 8) – Cycles, storage, instruments • High speed IP interconnect – Hubs in Chicago and Atlanta – Links are multiples of 10Gbps – Reserve dedicated paths for apps – Management strategies being discussed • Operational - 2004 2010 • Shared networks for most applications • Ability to configure special networks to serve applications • Dynamically schedulable networks – Depends on progress in optical switching and associated management/control – Eventually in real-time