First 500 Terabytes Transmitted via LHCGlobal Grid 244
neutron_p writes "When the LHC Computer Grid starts operating in 2007, it will be the most data-intensive physics instrument on the planet. Today eight major computing centers successfully completed a challenge to sustain a continuous data flow of 600 megabytes per second on average for 10 days from CERN in Geneva, Switzerland to seven sites in Europe and the US. The total amount of data transmitted during this challenge -- 500 terabytes -- would take about 250 years to download using a typical 512 kilobit per second household broadband connection."
But will.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But will.... (Score:2)
Crikey! (Score:2)
That's all nice, but (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's all nice, but (Score:4, Funny)
<SARCASM>
After all, the only content that goes over networks like this is obviously RIAA pap^Wvcontent, and 600MB/s is a full CD every second!
</SARCASM>
Re:That's all nice, but (Score:2)
I think it's the MPAA that should be more worried... Really, mp3 transfer is quick enough.
I know many who bitch about downloading a movie off eDonkey and how slow it is. I remind them that it's free, and if they don't like it they can always go buy the DVD...
Great! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Great! (Score:5, Funny)
Only on
Re:Great! (Score:2)
Made a mess. See? Too much boobies too fast!
The power is too much for any mortal man!
IronChefMorimoto
Library of Congresses? (Score:3, Funny)
On a side note, I tried to find out what the real data size of the LOC is, but I could not.
Re:Library of Congresses? (Score:2, Funny)
http://64.233.179.104/search?q=cache:asL7GGh_Js
Re:Library of Congresses? (Score:3, Informative)
Server Error
The server encountered an error and could not complete your request.
If the problem persists, please mail error@google.com and mention this error message and the query that caused it.
Of course, that's because of /.'s lame space-in-url-idiocy. Anyways, the LoC is actually approx. 20TB.
Re:Library of Congresses? (Score:2)
This pales in comparison to... (Score:5, Funny)
Of course, the latency for this gargantuan data pipeline is a bit on the high side...
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:4, Funny)
Me too, but it's the frame rates that are killing me (and getting me killed).
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
Opens envelope.... "I turn 20 deg to the left and fire..."
2 days later... message reads... "Augggghghh!!"
Not really. (Score:3, Insightful)
More to the point, the time it would take to get the data onto and off the tapes is left out of your argument. The bandwidth of a truck full of tapes is an old argument, but they're just so damn slow at both endpoints, they're not that useful after all
When the data arrives through a network pipe, it's on disk ready to be crunched through whatever program you're running...
8 or 9 years ago, I used to work in the post-production industry in Soho, London. There's a network called 'Sohonet' where lots of t
Re:Not really. (Score:4, Interesting)
600 Megs a second. I'd be interested in seeing what sort of disk technology can handle that level of throughput. They must have some amount of buffering going on, hand in hand with the bonus that they're probably able to just stream the data to arrays of disks without really being too concerned about placement (I'm assuming the data transfer is essentially a sequential stream of data, not sodding great numbers of small files, of course).
Re:Not really. (Score:2)
Maybe they're just piped to
Re:Not really. (Score:2)
That's easy. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not really. (Score:2)
Or use a high-end SGI box or Sun box with multiple SCSI channels bonded into one filesystem with xlv (or the sun equivalent). Each channel goes to a different RAID. Problem solved.
Or
Simon
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:3, Interesting)
From TFA:
"When the LHC starts operating in 2007, it will be the most data-intensive physics instrument on the planet, producing more than 1500 megabytes of data every second for over a decade."
"Scientists working at over two hundred other computing facilities...will access the data via the Grid."
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
No it doesn't. Sure, the part of the transfer than FedEx does for you take under 24 hours, but how long does it take to write the data from the source systems onto the tapes? How long does it take to read the data off the tapes and onto the source systems?
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
and now for something completely different.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:5, Interesting)
But to address your point, yes, tape can be slow. However, the best tape drive money can buy right now (a title claimed by HP's Ultrium 960 [hp.com]) is faster than most hard drives -- 160MB/sec according to the specs. It's not going to be that bad. Expensive, yes, but not slow.
Just a thought experiment: sending a terabyte of data via this tape solution would require (1,000,000 megs / 160 megs per sec) 6,250 seconds, or 104 minutes to write to tape. This assumes 2:1 compression of course, but the actual compressability is unknown.
Sending 500 terabytes in this fashion would require 866 hours (36 days) to write and that same amount to read back onto disk. 72 days sounds like a lot, but this could be shrunk down to as little as 104 minutes if you're willing to employ 500 simultaneously-operating Ultrium 960 tape drives. Expensive, yes, but this is a fun thought experiment where dollars don't matter. Let's assume you use ten drives in an array on both ends (ship the drives with the media to save buying double drives), shrinking your backup/restore times to 86.6 hours (3.6 days) each.
7.2 days plus FedEx Priority Overnight transit time of about 16 hours yields a total transfer time of 7.87 days (7 days, 20 hours, 52 minutes, 48 seconds), or about 680,400 seconds to transfer 500,000,000 megabytes. This gives us a sustained transfer rate of 734MB/sec. This is 22% better performance than the link in the article. The time could be shrunk to as little as one day (the vast majority of it FedEx transit time) if you have 500 tape drives operating all at once.
Total expenditure for such an enterprise would be 10 Ultrium 960 drives (10x$6,190 each = $61,900) and 625 tape cartridges (625x$129 each = $80,625), for a total hardware cost of $142,525. FedEx International Priority shipping costs for a box of tapes like this would be $603, bringing the grand total to $143,128.
Just for giggles, a 500-drive array would cost you $3,095,000 in drive hardware but still take only $80,625 in tapes. With shipping it's a mere $3,176,228.
I'm willing to bet the LHC network costs considerably more than that to operate. What's more, the "tape" network hardware costs need be borne only once. The only operating costs are FedEx shipping costs and replacement tapes if and when needed. It's actually a very efficient way to send huge sums of data from place to place when you think about it.
Note: I've done all this math off the cuff while doing about ten other things, so if my figures are off, don't try to have me drawn and quartered. It was a joke, and it's supposed to be mildly entertaining.
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
Mirrored Disk Drives (Score:2)
Re:This pales in comparison to... (Score:2)
Dark Fibre (Score:5, Interesting)
Well going outside the US is a different story. I really don't know how we connect to Europe etc.
Re:Dark Fibre (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Dark Fibre (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Dark Fibre (Score:2)
In our metro area, prices for business bandwidth (via fiber) are out of sync with consumer grade circuits. Telcove is helping correct the monopoly that Cox Business (was Fibernet) had, to a degree.
Dark Fibre (Score:3, Funny)
The Metamucil of choice by all Lord Siths
Re:Dark Fibre (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Dark Fibre (Score:2)
rr (Score:3, Interesting)
But seriously. What do you transfer then? I mean, how many Libraries of Congress do you need sitting around on disk.
Re:rr (Score:2, Interesting)
Eh, nevermind...it's a pissing contest.
Re:rr (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:rr (Score:2)
Re:rr (Score:2)
Re:rr (Score:5, Funny)
Re:rr (Score:2)
Yes I would like to have fibre running to my house. And I might notice the increase in speed when playing CounterStrike, downl
Re:rr (Score:3, Interesting)
As for what to send, Physics info works great, as thats what the story is about. For residential use, its all about p2p.
When 10/10 is standard(VERY capped fiber) expect a nice p2p mounted filesystem, where instead of the traditional p2p process (search, trim results, download file, wait,
42 (Score:5, Funny)
Cost (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cost (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cost (Score:2)
Though perhaps 12 is the number with redundancy built into the system.
Damn I'm a sick bastard too.
Re:Cost (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cost (Score:2)
Re:Cost (Score:2)
Re:Cost (Score:2)
At last! (Score:5, Funny)
Where is the torrent ? (Score:4, Funny)
BROADER band? (Score:3, Interesting)
Will this allow you to fileshare so fast that no one can even track it?? Now that would be interesting!
Seriously though, after reading the article and the miscellaneous links. The numbers were astounding! In comparison to my own broadband, I can get 5 or 6 gigs downloaded in a VERY good day at most. Whereas this network enabled traffic of up to 50 terabytes a DAY! Woot woot! When can I hook up for it?
Re:BROADER band? (Score:2)
Re:BROADER band? (Score:2)
Seriously though, after reading the article and the miscellaneous links. The numbers were astounding! In comparison to my own broadband, I can get 5 or 6 gigs downloaded in a VERY good day at most. Whereas this network enabled traffic of up to 50 terabytes a DAY! Woot woot! When can I hook up for it?
Where can I buy cheap, and I mean CHEAP, hard disk drives to save all this good stuff? I can't afford Pricewatch prices at that data rate.
RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
512 kb? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:512 kb? (Score:2)
Re:512 kb? (Score:2)
It all boils down to BT increasing the capabilities of their exchanges as demand increases, and also on how close you are to the exchange.
640 MB/sec (Score:5, Funny)
"640MB/sec ought to be enough for anybody." --Me,
Re:640 MB/sec (Score:2)
"640MB/sec ought to be enough for anybody." --Me,
"It's never enough...for anybody." -- Me,
Re:640 MB/sec (Score:2)
"640MB/sec ought to be enough for anybody." --Me,
"It's never enough...for anybody." -- Me,
"Too much is never enough." MTV, 1983
Ha... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, I've got a 3 megabit connection! It'd only take...uh...well, 42 years or so...but I'd upgrade to that 1 gigabit connection they have in Asia before it finished...
What was Really Transmitted.. (Score:2, Funny)
WOW! One copy of SimplyMEPIS per second... (Score:2)
Now, with a dozen pipes like that the task could be done in a month....
Standard terms (Score:5, Funny)
Illegal Units (Score:2)
Re:Standard terms (Score:2, Interesting)
What is there in it for Joe Sixpack? (Score:2, Insightful)
Imaging 2007, *AA has made it almost impossible to download any content. So I'm sitting on 600 MB/sec of BW and checking /. and reading emails.
Important (Score:2)
Typical? (Score:2)
Thats why I d/l at 6 Mbits/ second.
Re:Typical? (Score:2)
So that would only take you... what, only 20.83 years or so? Yeah, that's WAY better.
I can't understand the measurements they're using... can someone state this in terms of Libraries of Congress per second?
m-
Re:Typical? (Score:2)
600 megabytes per second on average for 10 days (Score:2)
Not sure why this is completely notable (Score:5, Insightful)
OK... they lit up the equivalent of two OC48's worth of bandwidth. That's half of an OC192 or a 10G Ethernet. There have been long haul OC192's for a number of years now. If I hook up a hardware-based traffic generator and run at 100% over an OC192 for a few weeks will I get a slashdot article, too?
Re:Not sure why this is completely notable (Score:2)
If you do so on a worldwide scale and use that infrastructure to solve the fundamental questions of physics, yes. It's not supposed to be that technologically amazing, it's just a progress report and a proof of concept.
Re:Not sure why this is completely notable (Score:5, Interesting)
The accomplishment is not in the data rate, it's in the ability of the participating organisation's to get a stable network going. One that is close enough to the one that the real scientists will be using in a couple of years.
Consider that there's a large number of institutes, universities, etc. that all have their own IT departments, plus all the physicists that have to be involved because it's their grant money funding all this. It's thousands of people coordinating. And I would be surprised if they hadn't set up different service classes, priorisation schemes and what not.
Setting up a trivial network between a couple of sites that are all under your control is close to trivial: you just need to talk to you telco and buy the lines, and hook up the routers. But establishing a working network between these many institutions takes a lot more.
Re:Not sure why this is completely notable (Score:2)
This is important because the experiment will create more data than can be stored there, so it has to be dumped "into the grid". If the datarate couldnt be sustained, data would be lost.
Re:Not sure why this is completely notable (Score:2)
Probably yes, if you route the traffic to a major e-commerce site.
5 Gbps sustained is indeed not that much traffic, and the underground grid computing community probably has gone beyond that by now.
MPAA & RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
The lawsuit is expected to destroy CERN and any sort of decent networking research anybody was even thinking about doing for the next 50 year.
In related news... (Score:2)
It's the answer! (Score:3, Funny)
That's a lot of porn! (Score:2)
Lofar project (Score:4, Interesting)
The data rate [lofar.org] might even be bigger than at Cern: 20 terrabit/sec straight after the A/D converters and still a mighty 0.4 terrabit/sec after the initial data reduction (DSPs + FPGAs). All the remaining data will be transfered over a dedicated fiber network to a central computer. To reduce all this data they need a big fat supercomputer, this will be a IBM Blue Gene [ibm.com] with serial number 2, to be handed over tomorrow [zdnet.com]. For the moment it will be the fastest computer in Europe and ranking somewhere in the top 10 of the world.
Somewhere on Naboo.. (Score:5, Funny)
sri
250 Years? Bah... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:250 Years? Bah... (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, and if you factor leap years into your calculation, the number is 247.56318604710117372677263163232
500TB of what? (Score:2)
PORN (Score:2)
eom
(can't believe I haven't seen one of those with a FUNNY yet)
500TB of what? (Score:2)
Not with my connection! (Score:2)
A little late for Doom3 (Score:2)
Use units I know! (Score:2)
Re:That's a lot (Score:2)
Re:woooow.... (Score:3, Interesting)