The Project 8 collaboration aims to measure the absolute neutrino mass or improve on the current limit by measuring the tritium beta decay electron spectrum. We present the current distributed computing model for the Project 8 experiment. Project 8 is in its second phase of data taking with a near continuous data rate of 1Gbps. The current computing model uses DIRAC (Distributed Infrastructure with Remote Agent Control) for its workflow and data management. A detailed meta-data assignment using the DIRAC File Catalog is used to automate raw data transfers and subsequent stages of data processing. The DIRAC system is deployed on containers managed using a Kubernetes cluster to provide a scalable infrastructure. A modified DIRAC Site Director provides the ability to submit jobs using Singularity on opportunistic High-Performance Computing (HPC) sites.
Revised: December 7, 2020 |
Published: November 16, 2020
Citation
Schram M., M. Thomas, K.M. Fox, B.H. LaRoque, B.A. VanDevender, N.S. Solomon-Oblath, and D.E. Cowley. 2020.Distributed Computing for the Project 8 Experiment. In 24th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 2019). EPJ Web Conference, 245, Paper No. 03030. Paris:EDP Sciences.PNNL-SA-158419.doi:10.1051/epjconf/202024503030