From iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu Sat Jan 16 08:46:58 2010 From: iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu (Ioan Raicu) Date: Sat, 16 Jan 2010 08:46:58 -0600 Subject: [Swift-devel] CFP: 19th ACM International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing Message-ID: <4B51D162.2040805@cs.uchicago.edu> The 19th ACM International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC 2010) is now accepting submissions of research papers. Authors are invited to submit full papers of at most 12 pages or short papers of at most 4 pages. Details about formatting requirements and the submission process are given at http://hpdc2010.eecs.northwestern.edu/submitpaper.html. The deadline for registering an abstract has been extended to Friday, January 22, 2010 and the deadline for the complete paper is unchanged to Friday, January 22, 2010. The detailed call for papers follows, and can also be seen online at http://hpdc2010.eecs.northwestern.edu. ======================================================================= ACM HPDC 2010 Call For Papers 19th ACM International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing Chicago, Illinois June 21-25, 2010 http://hpdc2010.eecs.northwestern.edu/ The ACM International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC) is the premier venue for presenting the latest research on the design, implementation, evaluation, and use of parallel and distributed systems for high performance and high end computing. The 19th installment of HPDC will take place in the heart of the Chicago, Illinois, the third largest city in the United States and a major technological and cultural capital. The conference will be held on June 23-25 (Wednesday through Friday) with eight affiliated workshops occurring on June 21-22 (Monday and Tuesday). Open Grid Forum will be co-located as well, on June 20-22 (Sunday through Tuesday) Submissions are welcomed on all forms of high performance distributed computing, including grids, clouds, clusters, service-oriented computing, utility computing, peer-to-peer systems, and global computing ensembles. New scholarly research showing empirical and reproducible results in architectures, systems, and networks is strongly encouraged, as are experience reports of applications and deployments that can provide insights for future high performance distributed computing research. All papers will be rigorously reviewed by a distinguished program committee, with a strong focus on the combination of rigorous scientific results and likely high impact within high performance distributed computing. Research papers must clearly demonstrate research contributions and novelty while experience reports must clearly describe lessons learned and demonstrate impact. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to) the following, in the context of high performance distributed computing and high end computing: * Systems * Architectures * Algorithms * Networking * Programming languages and environments * Data management * I/O and file systems * Virtualization * Resource management, scheduling, and load-balancing * Performance modeling, simulation, and prediction * Fault tolerance, reliability and availability * Security, configuration, policy, and management issues * Multicore issues and opportunities * Models and use cases for utility, grid, and cloud computing Both full papers and short papers (for poster presentation and/or demonstrations) may be submitted. IMPORTANT DATES Paper Abstract submissions: January 15, 2010 Paper submissions: January 22, 2010 Author notification: March 30, 2010 Final manuscripts: April 23, 2010 SUBMISSIONS Authors are invited to submit full papers of at most 12 pages or short papers of at most 4 pages. The page limits include all figures and references. Papers should be formatted in the ACM proceedings style (e.g., http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates). Reviewing is single-blind. Papers must be self-contained and provide the technical substance required for the program committee to evaluate the paper's contribution, including how it differs from prior work. All papers will be reviewed and judged on correctness, originality, technical strength, significance, quality of presentation, and interest and relevance to the conference. Submitted papers must be original work that has not appeared in and is not under consideration for another conference or a journal. PUBLICATION Accepted full and short papers will appear in the conference proceedings. WORKSHOPS Eight workshops have been selected for co-location with HPDC, on June 21st and 22nd, 2010. Please visit the workshop web page at http://hpdc2010.eecs.northwestern.edu/workshops.html for more information. The workshops include: * Emerging Computational Methods for the Life Sciences * LSAP: Large-Scale System and Application Performance * MDQCS: Managing Data Quality for Collaborative Science * ScienceCloud: Scientific Cloud Computing * CLADE: Challenges of Large Applications in Distributed Environments * DIDC: Data Intensive Distributed Computing * MAPREDUCE: MapReduce and its Applications * VTDC: Virtualization Technologies for Distributed Computing OPEN GRID FORUM Open Grid Form (ogf.org ) will have a co-located meeting with HPDC. Please visit the web site for more information. GENERAL CO-CHAIRS Kate Keahey, Argonne National Labs Salim Hariri, University of Arizona STEERING COMMITTEE Salim Hariri, Univ. of Arizona (Chair) Andrew A. Chien, Intel / UCSD Henri Bal, Vrije University Franck Cappello, INRIA Jack Dongarra, Univ. of Tennessee Ian Foster, ANL& Univ. of Chicago Andrew Grimshaw, Univ. of Virginia Carl Kesselman, USC/ISI Dieter Kranzlmueller, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. Muenchen Miron Livny, Univ. of Wisconsin Manish Parashar, Rutgers University Karsten Schwan, Georgia Tech David Walker, Univ. of Cardiff Rich Wolski, UCSB PROGRAM CHAIR Peter Dinda, Northwestern University PROGRAM COMMITTEE Kento Aida, NII and Tokyo Institute of Technology Ron Brightwell, Sandia National Labs Fabian Bustamante, Northwestern University Henri Bal, Vrije Universiteit Frank Cappello, INRIA Claris Castillo, IBM Research Henri Casanova, University of Hawaii Abhishek Chandra, University of Minnesota Chris Colohan, Google Brian Cooper, Yahoo Research Wu-chun Feng, Virginia Tech Renato Ferreira, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais Jose Fortes, University of Florida Ian Foster, University of Chicago / Argonne Geoffrey Fox, Indiana University Michael Gerndt, TU-Munich Andrew Grimshaw, University of Virginia Thilo Kielmann, Vrije Universiteit Zhiling Lan, IIT John Lange, Northwestern University Arthur Maccabe, Oak Ridge National Labs Satoshi Matsuoka, Toyota Institute of Technology Jose Moreira, IBM Research Klara Nahrstedt, UIUC Dushyanth Narayanan, Microsoft Research Manish Parashar, Rutgers University Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University Morris Riedel, Juelich Supercomputing Centre Matei Ripeanu, UBC Joel Saltz, Emory University Karsten Schwan, Georgia Tech Thomas Stricker, Google Jaspal Subhlok, University of Houston Martin Swany, University of Delaware Michela Taufer, University of Delaware Valerie Taylor, TAMU Douglas Thain, University of Notre Dame Jon Weissman, University of Minnesota Rich Wolski, UCSB and Eucalyptus Systems Dongyan Xu, Purdue University Ken Yocum, UCSD WORKSHOP CHAIR Douglas Thain, University of Notre Dame PUBLICITY CO-CHAIRS Martin Swany, U. Delaware Morris Riedel, Julich Supercomputing Centre Renato Ferreira, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais Kento Aida, NII and Tokyo Institute of Technology LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CHAIR Zhiling Lan, IIT STUDENT ACTIVITIES CO-CHAIRS John Lange, Northwestern University Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu Mon Jan 18 08:27:07 2010 From: iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu (Ioan Raicu) Date: Mon, 18 Jan 2010 08:27:07 -0600 Subject: [Swift-devel] CFP: IEEE 2010 Fourth International Workshop on Scientific Workflows (SWF 2010) Message-ID: <4B546FBB.601@cs.uchicago.edu> Call for Papers IEEE 2010 Fourth International Workshop on Scientific Workflows (SWF 2010) http://www.cs.wayne.edu/~shiyong/swf Miama, Florida, U.S.A., one day between July 5-10, 2010 In conjunction with IEEE ICWS/SCC/CLOUD/SERVICES 2010 Description Scientific workflows have become an increasingly popular paradigm for scientists to formalize and structure complex scientific processes to enable and accelerate many significant scientific discoveries. A scientific workflow is a formal specification of a scientific process, which represents, streamlines, and automates the analytical and computational steps that a scientist needs to go through from dataset selection and integration, computation and analysis, to final data product presentation and visualization. The importance of scientific workflows has been recognized by NSF since 2006 and was reemphasized recently in a science article titled "Beyond the Data Deluge"(Science, Vol. 323. no. 5919, pp. 1297 ?C 1298, 2009), which concluded, "In the future, the rapidity with which any given discipline advances is likely to depend on how well the community acquires the necessary expertise in database, workflow management, visualization, and cloud computing technologies." The goal of SWF 2010 is to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners to present their recent research results and best practices of scientific workflows, and identify the emerging trends, opportunities, problems, and challenges in this area. Authors are invited to submit regular papers (8 pages) and short papers (4 pages) that show original unpublished research results in all areas of scientific workflows. Topics of interest are listed below; however, submissions on all aspects of scientific workflows are welcome. Accepted SWF 2010 papers will be included in the proceedings of IEEE SERVICES 2010, which will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press. Topics o Scientific workflow provenance management and analytics o Scientific workflow data, metadata, service, and task management o Scientific workflow architectures, models, and languages o Scientific workflow monitoring, debugging, and failure handling o Streaming data processing in scientific workflows o Pipelined, data, workflow, and task parallelism in scientific workflows o Service, Grid, or Cloud-based scientific workflows o Data, metadata, compute, user-interaction, or visualization-intensive scientific workflows o Scientific workflow composition o Security issues in scientific workflows o Data integration and service integration in scientific workflows o Scientific workflow mapping, optimization, and scheduling o Scientific workflow modeling, simulation, analysis, and verification o Scalability, reliability, extensibility, agility, and interoperability o Scientific workflow applications Important dates Paper Submission March 17, 2009 Decision Notification (Electronic) April 17, 2009 Camera-Ready Submission & Pre-registration April 30, 2009 Workshop chairs: Shiyong Lu, Wayne State University Calton Pu, Georgia Tech Liqiang Wang, University of Wyoming Publication chairs (pending) Ilkay Altintas, San Diego Supercomputer Center Yogesh Simmhan, Microsoft Research Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University Publicity chair Jamil alhiyafi, Wayne State University Program committee Ilkay Altintas, San Diego Supercomputer Center, USA Roger Barga, Microsoft Research, USA Adam Barker, University of Oxford, UK Shawn Bowers, UC Davis Genome Center, USA Artem Chebotko, University of Texas at Pan American, USA Ian Gorton, PNNL Paul Groth, VU University Amsterdam Marta L. Queir?s Mattoso, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Luc Moreau, University of South Hampton, UK Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University, USA Yogesh Simmhan, Microsoft Corporation, USA Chung-Wei Hang, North Carolina State University, USA Ian Taylor, Cardiff University, UK Jianwu Wang, San Diego Supercomputer Center Wei Tan, ANL Ping Yang, Binghamton University, USA Ustun Yildiz, UC Davis Yong Zhao, Microsoft Corporation, USA Zhiming Zhao, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands For any questions, please send e-mails to Shiyong Lu at shiyong at wayne.edu . -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu Mon Jan 18 15:59:57 2010 From: iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu (Ioan Raicu) Date: Mon, 18 Jan 2010 15:59:57 -0600 Subject: [Swift-devel] CFP: 1st ACM Workshop on Scientific Cloud Computing (ScienceCloud) 2010 Message-ID: <4B54D9DD.7000103@cs.uchicago.edu> Call for Papers --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1st ACM Workshop on Scientific Cloud Computing (ScienceCloud) 2010 http://dsl.cs.uchicago.edu/ScienceCloud2010/ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- June 21st, 2010 Chicago, Illinois, USA Co-located with with ACM High Performance Distributed Computing Conference (HPDC) 2010 ======================================================================================= Workshop Overview The advent of computation can be compared, in terms of the breadth and depth of its impact on research and scholarship, to the invention of writing and the development of modern mathematics. Scientific Computing has already begun to change how science is done, enabling scientific breakthroughs through new kinds of experiments that would have been impossible only a decade ago. Today's science is generating datasets that are increasing exponentially in both complexity and volume, making their analysis, archival, and sharing one of the grand challenges of the 21st century. The support for data intensive computing is critical to advancing modern science as storage systems have experienced an increasing gap between its capacity and its bandwidth by more than 10-fold over the last decade. There is an emerging need for advanced techniques to manipulate, visualize and interpret large datasets. Scientific Computing is the key to many domains' "holy grail" of new knowledge, and comes in many shapes and forms, from high-performance computing (HPC) which is heavily focused on compute-intensive applications, high-throughput computing (HTC) which focuses on using many computing resources over long periods of time to accomplish its computational tasks, many-task computing (MTC) which aims to bridge the gap between HPC and HTC by focusing on using many resources over short periods of time, to data-intensive computing which is heavily focused on data distribution and harnessing data locality by scheduling of computations close to the data. The 1st workshop on Scientific Cloud Computing (ScienceCloud) will provide the scientific community a dedicated forum for discussing new research, development, and deployment efforts in running these kinds of scientific computing workloads on Cloud Computing infrastructures. The ScienceCloud workshop will focus on the use of cloud-based technologies to meet new compute intensive and data intensive scientific challenges that are not well served by the current supercomputers, grids or commercial clouds. What architectural changes to the current cloud frameworks (hardware, operating systems, networking and/or programming models) are needed to support science? Dynamic information derived from remote instruments and coupled simulation and sensor ensembles are both important new science pathways and tremendous challenges for current HPC/HTC/MTC technologies. How can cloud technologies enable these new scientific approaches? How are scientists using clouds? Are there scientific HPC/HTC/MTC workloads that are suitable candidates to take advantage of emerging cloud computing resources with high efficiency? What benefits exist by adopting the cloud model, over clusters, grids, or supercomputers? What factors are limiting clouds use or would make them more usable/efficient? This workshop encourages interaction and cross-pollination between those developing applications, algorithms, software, hardware and networking, emphasizing scientific computing for such cloud platforms. We believe the workshop will be an excellent place to help the community define the current state, determine future goals, and define architectures and services for future science clouds. Topics of Interest --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We invite the submission of original work that is related to the topics below. The papers can be either short (5 pages) position papers, or long (10 pages) research papers. Topics of interest include (in the context of Cloud Computing): * scientific computing applications o case studies on cloud computing o case studies comparing clouds, cluster, grids, and/or supercomputers o performance evaluation * performance evaluation o real systems o cloud computing benchmarks o reliability of large systems * programming models and tools o map-reduce and its generalizations o many-task computing middleware and applications o integrating parallel programming frameworks with storage clouds o message passing interface (MPI) o service-oriented science applications * storage cloud architectures and implementations o distributed file systems o content distribution systems for large data o data caching frameworks and techniques o data management within and across data centers o data-aware scheduling o data-intensive computing applications o eventual-consistency storage usage and management * compute resource management o dynamic resource provisioning o scheduling o techniques to manage many-core resources and/or GPUs * high-performance computing o high-performance I/O systems o interconnect and network interface architectures for HPC o multi-gigabit wide-area networking o scientific computing tradeoffs between clusters/grids/supercomputers and clouds o parallel file systems in dynamic environments * models, frameworks and systems for cloud security o implementation of access control and scalable isolation Paper Submission and Publication --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Authors are invited to submit papers with unpublished, original work of not more than 10 pages of double column text using single spaced 10 point size on 8.5 x 11 inch pages, (including all text, figures, and references) as per ACM 8.5 x 11 manuscript guidelines (http://www.acm.org/publications/instructions_for_proceedings_volumes); document templates can be found at http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates. A 250 word abstract (PDF format) must be submitted online at https://cmt.research.microsoft.com/ScienceCloud2010/ before the deadline of February 22nd, 2010 at 11:59PM PST; the final 10 page papers in PDF format will be due on March 1st, 2010 at 11:59PM PST. Papers will be peer-reviewed, and accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings as part of the ACM digital library. Notifications of the paper decisions will be sent out by April 1st, 2010. Selected excellent work will be invited to submit extended versions of the workshop paper to a special issue journal. Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper. For more information, please visit http://dsl.cs.uchicago.edu/ScienceCloud2010/. Important Dates --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Abstract Due: February 22nd, 2010 * Papers Due: March 1st, 2010 * Notification of Acceptance: April 1st, 2010 * Workshop Date: June 21st, 2010 Committee Members --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop Chairs * Pete Beckman, University of Chicago & Argonne National Laboratory * Ian Foster, University of Chicago & Argonne National Laboratory * Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University Steering Committee * Jeff Broughton, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab., USA * Alok Choudhary, Northwestern University, USA * Dennis Gannon, Microsoft Research, USA * Robert Grossman, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA * Kate Keahey, Nimbus, University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory, USA * Ed Lazowska, University of Washington, USA * Ignacio Llorente, Open Nebula, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain * David E. Martin, Argonne National Laboratory, Northwestern University, USA * Gabriel Mateescu, Linkoping University, Sweden * David O'Hallaron, Carnegie Mellon University, Intel Labs, USA * Rich Wolski, Eucalyptus, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA * Kathy Yelick, University of California at Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab., USA Technical Committee * David Abramson, Monash University, Australia * Roger Barga, Microsoft Research, USA * Roy Campbell, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA * Henri Casanova, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA * Brian Cooper, Yahoo! Research, USA * Peter Dinda, Northwestern University, USA * Jack Dongara, University of Tennessee, USA * Geoffrey Fox, Indiana University, USA * Adriana Iamnitchi, University of South Florida, USA * Alexandru Iosup, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands * James Hamilton, Amazon Web Services, USA * Tevfik Kosar, Louisiana State University, USA * Shiyong Lu, Wayne State University, USA * Ruben S. Montero, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain * Reagan Moore, University of North Carolina, Chappel Hill, USA * Jose Moreira, IBM Research, USA * Lavanya Ramakrishnan, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory * Matei Ripeanu, University of British Columbia, Canada * Larry Rudolph, VMware, USA * Marc Snir, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA * Xian-He Sun, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA * Hakim Weatherspoon, Cornell University, USA * Mike Wilde, University of Chicago & Argonne National Laboratory, USA * Alec Wolman, Microsoft Research, USA * Yong Zhao, Microsoft, USA -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= From iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu Tue Jan 19 16:49:51 2010 From: iraicu at cs.uchicago.edu (Ioan Raicu) Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2010 16:49:51 -0600 Subject: [Swift-devel] CFP: Cloud Futures 2010: Advancing Research with Cloud Computing Message-ID: <4B56370F.3060608@cs.uchicago.edu> Cloud Futures 2010: Advancing Research with Cloud Computing April 8-9, 2010 Redmond, WA Workshop Co-Chairs Dan Reed David A. Patterson Corporate Vice President Professor of Computer Science Extreme Computing Group Reliable Adaptive Distributed Systems Lab Microsoft Research University of California - Berkeley Call for Abstracts Cloud computing is fast becoming the most important platform for research. Scientists today need vast computing resources to collect, share, manipulate, and explore massive data sets as well as to build and deploy new services for research. Cloud computing has the potential to advance research discoveries by making data and computing resources readily available at unprecedented economy of scale and nearly infinite scalability. To realize the full promise of cloud computing for research, however, one must think about the cloud as a holistic platform for creating new services, new experiences, and new methods to pursue research, teaching and scholarly communication. This goal presents a broad range of interesting questions. We invite extended abstracts that illustrate the role of cloud computing across a variety of research and curriculum development areas---including computer science, earth sciences, healthcare, humanities, life sciences, and social sciences---that highlight how new techniques and methods of research in the cloud may solve distinct challenges arising in those diverse areas. Please include a bio (150 words max) and a brief abstract (300 words max) of a 30-minute short talk on a topic that describes practical experiences, experimental results, and vision papers. Please submit your abstract by February 10, 2010 to cloudfut at microsoft.com Invited talks will be announced on February 18, 2010 -- ================================================================= Ioan Raicu, Ph.D. NSF/CRA Computing Innovation Fellow ================================================================= Center for Ultra-scale Computing and Information Security (CUCIS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University 2145 Sheridan Rd, Tech M384 Evanston, IL 60208-3118 ================================================================= Cel: 1-847-722-0876 Tel: 1-847-491-8163 Email: iraicu at eecs.northwestern.edu Web: http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~iraicu/ https://wiki.cucis.eecs.northwestern.edu/ ================================================================= ================================================================= -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From aespinosa at cs.uchicago.edu Tue Jan 19 21:05:22 2010 From: aespinosa at cs.uchicago.edu (Allan Espinosa) Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2010 21:05:22 -0600 Subject: [Swift-devel] swift-plot-log plotting problems Message-ID: <50b07b4b1001191905x62c02779id41bbe00593a5fb1@mail.gmail.com> Hi, I'm having problems plotting the attached logfile. The version of swift that generated it was Swift svn swift-r3019 (swift modified locally) cog-r2446 This was from the swift-plot-log from the latest svn gnuplot> plot "coaster-blocks.data" u 1:2 w steps title "Queued Workers", "coaster-blocks.data" u 1:3 w steps title "Running Workers" ^ can't read data file "coaster-blocks.data" "/home/aespinosa/work/cog/modules/swift/bin/../libexec/log-processing//coaster-block-timeline.plot", line 6: util.c: No such file or directory make: *** [coaster-block-timeline.png] Error 1 rm karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.sorted-start.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.sorted-start.event karatasks.last karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.seenstates karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.sorted-start.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.sorted-start.event karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.seenstates karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.sorted-by-duration karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.event karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.seenstates karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.event karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.sorted-by-duration karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.eip karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.sorted-start.event >From the included plotting utilities: lot-duration-histogram karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.sorted-by-duration karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue-duration-histogram.png weights.sh /home/espinosa/workflows/jgi_mpiblastp/runs/production60/mpiblastp-production60.log gnuplot> plot 'weights.tmp' with dots title 'scheduler host scores'; ^ "/home/falkon/swift/src/cog/modules/swift/dist/swift-svn/bin/../libexec/log-processing//weights.plot", line 46: no data point found in specified file make: *** [weights.png] Error 1 rm karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.sorted-start.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.sorted-start.event karatasks.last karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.seenstates karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.sorted-start.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.sorted-start.event karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.seenstates karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Queue.sorted-by-duration karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.event karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.seenstates karatasks.FILE_OPERATION.event karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.eip karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.sorted-by-duration karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.Active.eip karatasks.FILE_TRANSFER.event karatasks.JOB_SUBMISSION.sorted-start.event -Allan -- Allan M. 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