September 25, 2002
The 'OptIPuter': California, Illinois Researchers Fashion New Paradigm For Data-Intensive Computing and Collaboration over Optical Networks
San Diego and Chicago -- The National Science
Foundation (NSF) today awarded $13.5 million over five years to a
consortium led by the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), and the
University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). The funds will support design and
development of a powerful distributed cyber "infostructure" to support
data-intensive scientific research and collaboration. Initial application
efforts will be in bioscience and earth sciences research, including
environmental, seismic and remote sensing. It is one of the largest
Information Technology Research (ITR) grants awarded since the NSF
established the program in 2000.
Dubbed the "OptIPuter" -- for optical networking, Internet Protocol,
and computer storage and processing -- the envisioned infostructure will
tightly couple computational, storage and visualization resources over
parallel optical networks using the IP communication mechanism. "The
opportunity to build and experiment with an OptIPuter has arisen because
of major technology changes in the last five years," said principal
investigator Larry Smarr, director of the California Institute for
Telecommunications and Information Technology [Cal-(IT)2], and Harry E.
Gruber Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at UCSD's Jacobs
School of Engineering. "Optical bandwidth and storage capacity are growing
much faster than processing power, turning the old computing paradigm on
its head: we are going from a processor-centric world, to one centered on
optical bandwidth, where the networks will be faster than the
computational resources they connect."
The OptIPuter project will enable scientists who are generating massive
amounts of data to interactively visualize, analyze, and correlate their
data from multiple storage sites connected to optical networks. Designing
and deploying the OptIPuter for grid-intensive computing will require
fundamental inventions including software and middleware abstractions to
deliver unique capabilities in a lambda-rich world. (A "lambda," in
networking parlance, is a fully dedicated wavelength of light in an
optical network, each already capable of bandwidth speeds from 1-10
gigabits/second.) The researchers in southern California and Chicago will
focus on new network-control and traffic-engineering techniques to
optimize data transmission; new middleware to bandwidth-match distributed
resources; and new collaboration and visualization to enable real-time
interaction with high-definition imagery.
UCSD and UIC will lead the research team, in partnership with
researchers at Northwestern University, San Diego State University,
University of Southern California and University of California-Irvine [a
partner of UCSD in Cal-(IT)2]. Co-PIs on the project are UCSD's Mark
Ellisman and Philip Papadopoulos of the San Diego Supercomputer Center
(SDSC) at UCSD, who will provide expertise and oversight on application
drivers, grid and cluster computing, and data management; and UIC's Thomas
A. DeFanti and Jason Leigh, who will provide expertise and oversight on
networking, visualization and collaboration technologies. "Think of the
OptIPuter as a giant graphics card, connected to a giant disk system, via
a system bus that happens to be an extremely high-speed optical network,"
said DeFanti, a distinguished professor of computer science at UIC and
co-director of the university's Electronic Visualization Laboratory. "One
of our major design goals is to provide scientists with advanced
interactive querying and visualization tools, to enable them to explore
massive amounts of previously uncorrelated data in near real time." The
OptIPuter project manager will be UIC's Maxine Brown. SDSC will provide
facilities and services, including access to the NSF-funded TeraGrid and
its 13.6 teraflops of cluster computing power distributed across four
sites.
The project's broad multidisciplinary team will also conduct
large-scale, application-driven system experiments. They will be carried
out in close conjunction with two data-intensive e-science efforts already
underway: NSF's EarthScope, and the Biomedical Informatics Research
Network (BIRN) funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). They
will provide the application drivers to ensure a useful and usable
OptIPuter design. Under co-PI Ellisman, UCSD's National Center for
Microscopy and Imaging Research (NCMIR) is driving the BIRN neuroscience
application, with an emphasis on neuroimaging. Under the leadership of
UCSD's Scripps Institution of oceanography's Deputy Director and Acting
Dean John Orcutt, Scripps' Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
is leading the EarthScope geoscience effort, including acquisition,
processing and scientific interpretation of satellite-derived remote
sensing, near-real-time environmental, and active source data.
The OptIPuter is a "virtual" parallel computer in which the individual
"processors" are widely distributed clusters; the "memory" is in the form
of large distributed data repositories; "peripherals" are very-large
scientific instruments, visualization displays and/or sensor arrays; and
the "motherboard" uses standard IP delivered over multiple dedicated
lambdas. Use of parallel lambdas will permit so much extra bandwidth that
the connection is likely to be uncongested. "Recent cost breakthroughs in
networking technology are making it possible to send multiple lambdas down
a single piece of customer-owned optical fiber," said co-PI Papadopoulos.
"This will increase potential capacity to the point where bandwidth ceases
to be the bottleneck in the development of metropolitan-scale grids."
According to Cal-(IT)2's Smarr, grid-intensive applications "will
require a large-scale distributed information infrastructure based on
petascale computing, exabyte storage, and terabit networks." A petaflop is
one-thousand-times faster than today's speediest parallel computers, which
process one trillion floating-point operations per second (teraflops). An
exabyte is a billion gigabytes of storage, and terabit networks will
transmit data at one trillion bits per secondsome 20 million times faster
than a dialup 56K Internet connection.
The southern California- and Chicago-based research teams already
collaborate on large-scale cluster networking projects and plan to
prototype the OptIPuter initially on campus, metropolitan and state-wide
optical fiber networks (including the Corporation for Education Network
Initiatives in California's experimental developmental network CalREN-XD
in California, and the Illinois Wired/Wireless Infrastructure for Research
and Education [I-WIRE] in Illinois).
Private companies will also collaborate with university researchers on
the project. IBM is providing systems architecture and performance help,
and Telcordia Technologies will work closely with the network research
teams to contribute its optical networking expertise. "The OptIPuter
project has the potential for extraordinary innovations in both computing
and networking, and we are pleased to be a part of this team of highly
qualified and experienced researchers," said Richard S. Wolff, Vice
President of Applied Research at Telcordia. Further, the San Diego Telecom
Council, which boasts a membership of 300 telecom companies, has expressed
interest in extending OptIPuter links to a variety of public- and
private-sector sites in San Diego County.
The project will also fund what is expected to
be the country's largest graduate-student program for optical networking research. The OptIPuter
will also extend into undergraduate classrooms, with curricula and research opportunities to be
developed for UCSD's new Sixth College, whose inaugural freshman class in Fall 2002 will be
the first to benefit from the college's commitment to the use of ubiquitous connectivity
technologies. Younger students will also be exposed to the vision of the OptIPuter, with field-based
curricula concentrated on Lincoln Elementary School in suburban Chicago, and UCSD's Preuss
School (a San Diego City charter school for grades 6-12, enrolling low-income,
first-generation college-bound students).
Contact:
Doug Ramsey
dramsey@ucsd.edu
ph: +1.858.822.5825
Laura Wolf
laura@evl.uic.edu
ph: +1.312.996.3002
Paul Tooby
ptooby@sdsc.edu
ph: +1.858.822.3654