• DocumentCode
    1726834
  • Title

    Data management at CERN: current status and future trends

  • Author

    Shiers, J.D.

  • Author_Institution
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • fYear
    1995
  • Firstpage
    174
  • Lastpage
    181
  • Abstract
    The European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN) straddles the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva. The accelerator that is currently in operation, LEP, entered service in 1989 and is expected to run until the end of the current millennium. The recently approved Large Hadron Collider, or LHC, which will coexist with LEP in the existing tunnel, is scheduled to start operation in 2004. This new facility will generate many or even many tens of PB of new data per year. Even the calibration and monitoring data will be in the 100 GB/year range! (Today, we have a few hundred TB of event data and 10-100 MB of calibration data.) We describe the evolution of the CERN-developed mass storage system originally built for LEP, the impact of the IEEE MSS reference model on this evolution, and our plans for the future. We also comment on the evolution, and state of the MSS reference model itself, and on response (or lack of response) from industry to the mass storage challenge that is facing many sites today.
  • Keywords
    computer facilities; high energy physics instrumentation computing; storage management; technological forecasting; CERN; CERN data management system; mass storage system; Calibration; Collaboration; Job shop scheduling; Laboratories; Large Hadron Collider; Monitoring; Physics; Web sites;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Mass Storage Systems, 1995. 'Storage - At the Forefront of Information Infrastructures', Proceedings of the Fourteenth IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Monterey, CA, USA
  • ISSN
    1051-9173
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-7064-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MASS.1995.528227
  • Filename
    528227