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Grid Computing Planet : Features: .NET Meets Grid Computing


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.NET Meets Grid Computing
May 17, 2002
By Paul Shread

Philippine researchers last fall created what they say is the first generic system for Grid computing that uses an industry-standard Web service infrastructure, according to a paper to be presented at the Second IEEE International Symposium on Cluster Computing and the Grid in Berlin, Germany next week.

The system, called Bayanihan Computing .NET, was developed by Luis Sarmenta and others at Ateneo de Manila University, and Richard Lozada of Microsoft Philippines, building on Sarmenta's June 2001 Ph.D. thesis at MIT.

Globus and IBM have also been working on the convergence of Grid computing and Web services, in the Open Grid Services Architecture protocols unveiled in February.

Bayanihan Computing .NET is a generic Grid computing framework based on Microsoft .NET that uses Web services to harness computing resources through 'volunteer' computing similar to projects such as SETI@Home, and to make the computing resources easily accessible through easy-to-use and interoperable computational Web services, the paper said.

"In doing so, we achieve the two most fundamental goals in Grid computing, and demonstrate the great potential of using Web services for Grid computing," the paper said.

"While key industry players such as Microsoft, IBM, and Sun are already aggressively promoting XML Web services as a way to improve business systems, we propose and demonstrate a new idea: that of using XML Web services not only for business systems but for Grid computing systems as well," the paper said.

The system allows computational clients to create pools of tasks to be computed, and volunteers or workers to retrieve these tasks, perform them, and return their results. The PoolService is generic - that is, authorized computational clients can upload code for different applications in the form of an assembly (i.e., a DLL file), which is then automatically downloaded by the workers as necessary. Security mechanisms in Microsofts .NET framework allow the worker machines to safely execute these assemblies, the paper said. Thus, unlike application-specific systems such as SETI@home, Bayanihan Computing .NET can be used for different applications. In fact, the same PoolService can be used by different clients at the same time.

The idea behind computational Web services is to offer simple Web methods that computation clients can call to perform application-specific computations on their own data, and then use a parallel computing resource behind the scenes to perform the computation much faster than possible on a single machine, Sarmenta and others wrote.

In addition to making programming easier, computational Web services also make it possible to have very thin clients, the paper said. Any device that can access Web services - including handheld PDAs, and potentially even cellular phones - can use these computational Web services.

"Computational Web services can, quite literally, bring supercomputing power to the hands of ordinary users," the paper said. "Furthermore, computational Web services are not limited to volunteer computing systems. With the appropriate back-ends, they can hide any high-performance processing resource in general - whether it be a supercomputer, a cluster, or even the Grid as a whole (including other computational Web services). ... By providing a simple interface to the programmer, computational Web services make it possible to achieve one of the key goals in Grid computing - to allow users to get computing power as easily as one can get electrical power through a wall socket."

"As far as we know, Bayanihan Computing .NET, developed in September 2001, is the first generic system for volunteer computing and Grid computing that uses Web services," the researchers wrote. "Intel has an earlier peer-to-peer cycle sharing demo, but it is not generic, and does not allow users to easily volunteer their machines. As far as we know, we are also the first to propose and to implement the idea of computational Web services. Earlier work exists on Grid portals that allow end users to submit jobs to the Grid by filling up a form on a Web page, but these are not as flexible and powerful as computational Web services, which can be called like methods in other programs, and can thus be used not only by end-users, but by Grid service providers as well."

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