Grid computing for all

  • Authors:
  • Art Vandenberg

  • Affiliations:
  • Georgia State University

  • Venue:
  • Proceedings of the 43rd annual Southeast regional conference - Volume 1
  • Year:
  • 2005

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Abstract

The deployment of a general purpose utility grid can aggregate otherwise disparate and autonomous resources and provide access to grid technology for researchers, faculty and students for learning about grids, testing grid capabilities, deploying applications. Using inter-institutional collaboration to build cooperative, grid computing for all can advance grid technology.Grids for "big science" or specific applications tend to be deployed for long term needs, with significant investment of project specific resources, and perhaps with less concern for integration with enterprise infrastructures. Indeed, such big science grids are "enterprises" in their own right, establishing solutions that sit as a layer of services above, outside and distinct from a researcher's locally affiliated enterprise. There is a need for a utility grid that is differentiated from such application specific grids. Deploying such a utility grid would be a step toward the vision described by Foster et alia in The Physiology of the Grid: An Open Grid Services Architecture for Distributed Systems Integration - serving the "need to integrate services across distributed, heterogeneous, dynamic 'virtual organizations' formed from the disparate resources within a single enterprise and/or from external resource sharing and service provider relationships."Work begun as part of the NSF Middleware Initiative Integration Testbed Program has evolved from deploying individual campus grids to the work of SURAGrid. SURAGrid is engaging a broader collaboration of researchers, educators and students across the southeast and beyond to create a model of cooperative grid computing infrastructure and disseminate exemplars of technology, best practices, policy solutions and grid applications.