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Grid Computing Planet : News: Gridbus Project Releases Grid Accounting Services Architecture


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Gridbus Project Releases Grid Accounting Services Architecture
October 3, 2002
By Paul Shread

The Gridbus Project at the University of Melbourne has developed a Grid accounting services architecture.

"It is a must for commercial Grid computing, but it was one of the missing components in today's Grid computing, so this fills the gap," said program leader Rajkumar Buyya.

According to a paper authored by Buyya, of the Grid Computing and Distributed Systems (GRIDS) Lab at the University of Melbourne, and Alexander Barmouta of the University of Western Australia, Computer Science and Software Engineering University of Melbourne, computational Grids are emerging as the new infrastructure for Internet-based parallel and distributed computing. They enable the sharing, exchange, discovery, and aggregation of resources distributed across multiple administrative domains, organizations and enterprises.

To accomplish this, Grids need an infrastructure that supports various services: security, uniform access, resource management, scheduling, application composition, computational economy, and accountability, they said. Many Grid projects have developed technologies that provide many of these services with the exception of accountability.

Buyya and Barmouta proposed a new infrastructure they called GridBank. Its components include:

- The Grid Resource Meter, which extracts resource usage information from the operating system and converts it into a Grid-wide standard form.

- The GridBank Charging Module, which is responsible for determining legitimacy of payment instruments passed to it by the GridBank Payment Module, setting up and removing (after execution of user application) temporary local accounts, calculating total charge using the Resource Usage Record and the service rates passed by the Grid Trade Service, and redeeming the payment with the GridBank server.

- The GridBank Payment Module, which receives requests for job execution from the Grid Resource Broker, obtains a payment instrument from the GridBank, forwards the payment to the GridBank Charging Module and submits the job when the charging module notifies it that a local account has been set up. The Grid Trade Server negotiates service cost/rates with the Grid Resource Broker and provides interface for the charging module to obtain the information. Negotiation protocols are already defined in, they said.

In the future, the GridBank system will be expanded to provide multiple servers/branches across the Grid to achieve scalability in a similar manner as the currency servers in NetCash and NetCheque systems, Buyya and Barmouta said.

Information on the Gridbus project can be found at http://www.gridbus.org, and the GridBank article can be found at http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/~raj/papers/gridbank.pdf.

SDSC Storage Resource Broker Integrated with Globus GridFTP to Support TeraGrid

Data and Knowledge Systems researchers at the San Diego Supercomputer Center have collaborated with the GridFTP development team at the Globus Project to develop driver functions to integrate the SDSC Storage Resource Broker (SRB) with the GridFTP protocol.

This work, part of the National Science Foundation-supported Distributed Terascale Facility, or TeraGrid project, will help enable the next-generation computational grid to advance open scientific research.

"This is an important step in integrating the proven SRB with the grid infrastructure of Globus," said Arcot Rajasekar, director of the Data Grid Technologies Group in SDSC's Data and Knowledge Systems (DAKS) program. "One key to realizing the potential of grids is the ability to create a uniform environment, and the real strength of the SRB is its ability to interoperate and connect to a very broad range of heterogeneous and distributed systems."

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