Part I: E-Science, Applications, & Optimization
Leveraging the Grid for e-Science: The Remote Instrumentation Infrastructure
Alexey Cheptsov
Supporting e-Science Applications on e-Infrastructure: Some Use Cases from Latin America
Roberto Barbera, Francisco Brasileiro, Riccardo Bruno, Leandro Ciuffo, and Diego Scardaci
GEMS: User Control for Cooperative Scientific Repositories
Justin M. Wozniak, Paul Brenner, Santanu Chatterjee, Douglas Thain, Aaron Striegel, and Jesus Izaguirre
Performance Analysis and Optimization of Linear Workflows in Heterogeneous Network Environments
Qishi Wu and Yi Gu
Part II: Resource Management, Allocation, & Monitoring
Resource Management and Service Deployment in Grids
Christos Chrysoulas and Nicolas Sklavos
Social Grid Agents
Gabriele Pierantoni, Brian Coghlan, and Eamonn Kenny
Monitoring and Controlling Grid Systems
Ciprian Dobre
Part III: Grid Services & Middleware
Service Level Agreement for Job Control in Grid and High-Performance Computing
Roland Kübert
Composable Services Architectures for Grids
Vassiliki Pouli, Yuri Demchenko, Constantinos Marinos, Diego R. Lopez, and Mary Grammatikou
Phoenix: Employing Smart Logic to a New Generation of Semantically Driven Information SystemsAggelos Liapis, Nasos Michas, and Nikitas Tsopelas
Part IV: Grid Computing & Scientific Problems
State-of-art with PhyloGrid: Grid Computing Phylogenetic Studies on the EELA-2 Project Infrastructure
Raul Isea, Esther Montes, Antonio Juan Rubio-Montero, and Rafael Mayo
The Usage of the Grid in the Simulation of the Comet Oort-Cloud Formation
Giuseppe Leto, Marián Jakubík, Luboš Neslušan, and Piotr A. Dybczyński
Grid computing provides a mechanism for integrating, coordinating, and sharing heterogeneous computer resources. This continually evolving field now aims to completely disaggregate current computer platforms and distribute them across a network as resources that can be called into action by any eligible user or machine at any time.
This accessible and broad-ranging text/reference presents valuable research and results from many of the major projects involved in the emerging global grid infrastructure. With a particular focus on the practical advantages and applications of grid computing - including real case studies - the book provides an in-depth study of grid technology for a wide range of different needs.
Topics and features:
- Presents contributions from an international selection of experts in the field
- Provides summarizing abstracts and conclusions for each chapter
- Examines a remote instrumentation infrastructure, and a methodology to support e-science applications on e-infrastructures
- Describes the GEMS storage system, and pipeline workflows for optimizing end-to-end performance in wide-area networks
- Investigates semantic grid system architecture, social grid agents, and monitoring platforms designed for large-scale distributed systems
- Explores job control using service-level agreements
- Introduces the Composable Services Architecture for dynamic service provisioning, and the semantically driven communication middleware platform, Phoenix
- Discusses the PhyloGrid application, and a numerical simulation performed using grid computing
The deep insights that can be gleaned from the text make it a highly useful tool for researchers and professionals alike. Graduate students will also benefit from the extensive analysis on currently available grid systems.