We are looking forward to seeing you at the EIOW meeting in Leipzig at the Marriott Hotel on June 20. Our agenda will include the EIOW community and its needs for licenses, code releases and a community forum, a continued study of requirements for exciting projects like SKA, the experiences with current I/O middleware and the beginning of the implementation of EIOW''s core, RAS and HA components. If you haven''t already done so, please let Kati Clendening ( kati_clendening-qCPWdT176rRBDgjK7y7TUQ@public.gmane.org) know of your participation, so that we may offer you lunch. Our past meetings have led in an organized fashion to an exciting project with broad participation. We hope to see you in Leipzig. Peter J Braam EIOW Founder Parallel Scientific / Xyratex Agenda EIOW meeting Marriott Hotel, Leipz*ig - Colorado III meeting room* 6/20/2013 9:00 - 9.30 Hugo Falter, Partec / EOFS - opening remarks & legal issues 9.30 - 10.00 Peter Braam, Parallel Scientific - EIOW: History, outlook and recent achievements 10.00 - 10.45 Jonathan Jouty, Xyratex / Parallel Scientific - Core API’s 10.45 - 11.15 Coffee Break 11.15 - 12.00 Mathieu Boespflug, Xyratex / Parallel Scientific - High Availability - a further look Lunch 13:00 - 14:00 Chris Broekema, The Square Kilometer Array: ExaScale IO personified 14:00 - 15:00 Eric Barton, Quincey Koziol, John Bent, Intel Fast Forward, DAOS, HDF5 and PLFS 15:00 - 15:30 Tea 15:30 - 16:00 Sai Narasimhamurthy, Xyratex - Simulation, Modeling & RAS 16:00 - 16:30 Julian Kunkel, University of Hamburg - SIOX 16:30 - 17:00 Andre Brinkman, University of Mainz, TBD 17:00 - 17:30 Discussion Bios & Abstracts of new participants Chris Broekema The Square Kilometer Array: ExaScale IO personified The Square Kilometer Array is a new radio telescope to be built in Southern Africa and Western Austria starting in 2017. This project pushes ExaScale IO to the absolute limit. It combines a streaming HPC requirement large enough to seriously threaten the number 1 position in the top500, with a high performance temporary storage facility with unprecedented read/write capacity, and a very large archive system with associated compute hardware for (re-)processing of science data. In this talk I will introduce the telescope system, in particular the dataflow from the antenna to the final image on the astronomer''s display, and show the major challenges faced along the way. Chris Broekema is a researcher High Performance Computing at the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (ASTRON). He designed, built and operated several generations of HPC infrastructure for the LOFAR telescope in the Netherlands, and is now heavily involved in the pre-construction phase of the Square Kilometer Array. _______________________________________________ Lustre-discuss mailing list Lustre-discuss-aLEFhgZF4x6X6Mz3xDxJMA@public.gmane.org http://lists.lustre.org/mailman/listinfo/lustre-discuss