[dmis-bof] Updated Charter

Allen Luniewski luniew at almaden.ibm.com
Tue Mar 14 15:38:46 CST 2006


I find the proposed charter fundamentally sound.  I do have two small 
issues to raise.

I am surprised that it does not address policy control of data movement. 
The charter is mute on the subject of Policy so it does not seem to 
consider that out of scope.  Policy based data movement seems to be an 
essential aspect of a data transport mechanism in the evolving grid space.

I expected (hoped?) to find words asserting that management of an 
in-progress data transfer was in scope but did not.  Is the belief that 
existing management mechanisms (e.g., WSDM) are sufficient?  Is it 
something that will fall out of the work described?  Or is it out of 
scope?  Management of an in flight data movement by the interested parties 
seems so essential to me that I am surprised by the silence in the 
charter.  At the least, I would like to see the charter state whether or 
not management issues are in scope or out of scope.  (I can not decide if 
the "User Management" item in section 2 is about this issue.)

Allen




"William E. Allcock" <allcock at mcs.anl.gov> 
Sent by: owner-dmis-bof at ggf.org
03/14/2006 12:29 PM
Please respond to
<allcock at mcs.anl.gov>


To
"'Robert B. Wood'" <Robert.B.Wood at Sun.COM>, "'Michel Drescher'" 
<Michel.Drescher at uk.fujitsu.com>
cc
<dmis-bof at ggf.org>
Subject
RE: [dmis-bof] Updated Charter






Ok, next iteration is attached.  We tried to address the comments we had
received so far.

Bill 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-dmis-bof at ggf.org [mailto:owner-dmis-bof at ggf.org] 
> On Behalf Of Robert B. Wood
> Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2006 10:07 AM
> To: Michel Drescher
> Cc: allcock at mcs.anl.gov; dmis-bof at ggf.org
> Subject: Re: [dmis-bof] Updated Charter
> 
> In my opinion, "4th party data transfer" as a term such as described 
> below offers more debate than value.  To my understanding, a 
> 3rd party 
> copy operation is a data transfer between two data stores that is 
> initiated by [at least] one of the data stores or devices themselves, 
> without the aid or instruction of the user or their 
> server/application 
> code.  It was originally coined in the realm of data backup.
> 
> When an agent of the user (including the user him or herself) 
> initiates 
> a data transfer and the data transfer path includes the 
> user's system, 
> that is a first party operation.  When an agent initiates a data 
> transfer directly between two data stores or devices, without placing 
> their server in the data stream, this is an extended data movement 
> operation; what is referred to as extended copy or serverless 
> backup in 
> the data backup realm.
> 
> The usage of these terms is pretty well codified in the SCSI-3 
> specification and implemented in storage products. 
> 
> I'm not suggesting that management of agents, like the "truly 
> independent service" that Michel describes is trivial, in 
> fact the data 
> security aspects can be quite challenging.  Also the line 
> between direct 
> control and independent operations is pretty fuzzy, as data movements 
> rarely occur without some user involvement, be it simply an 
> exersize of 
> a service level agreement with the data storage service provider[s].
> 
> Just a couple of comments to the comments to the comments ... Bob
> 
> Michel Drescher wrote:
> 
> > Bill,
> >
> > some comments, related to the comments you put in the 
> charter document:
> >
> > 4th party data transfer:
> > I see 3 different scenarios for data movement. Let's assume 
> we have a 
> > (data) source and a (data) destination. We also have a user that 
> > wants data moved. If the user is the source, we have a direct pull 
> > case, if the user is the destination, then we have a direct push 
> > case. If the user tells the source to move some data to the 
> > destination, then this is 3rd party push, if the user tells the 
> > destination to get some data, then this is 3rd party pull.
> > Well, if the user tells a truly independent service to initiate a 
> > data transfer from source to target, then this is very 
> similar to 3rd 
> > party data transfer, but different enough as there is a 4th 
> instance 
> > participating in the data movement.
> >
> > Transport protocols:
> > Yes I meant application level protocols from a network 
> point of view, 
> > such as GridFTP, HTTP, FTP, etc.
> >
> >
> > Regarding the timeline:
> > The short term planning is ambitious, but manageable, I think, 
> > especially if we can appreciate broad contribution support.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Michel
> >
> > On 13 Mar 2006, at 22:41, William E. Allcock wrote:
> >
> >> All,
> >>
> >> Michel and I have updated the charter based on discussions 
> that  took 
> >> place
> >> at GGF16.  They are already scheduling slots for next GGF, so we 
> >> need to
> >> ratify this charter ASAP and become a full fledged working 
> group.  The
> >> charter is short, only a couple of pages of text and a table with 
> >> goals and
> >> timelines.  This shouldn't take long, so please take a few 
> minutes 
> >> now and
> >> review this.
> >>
> >> In particular we would like comments on:
> >>
> >>  - Do you agree with the focus and scope
> >>  - Do you think the Goals and timeline are reasonable? 
> Are we missing
> >> anything?
> >>  - Which documents / implementations would you be willing 
> to work on?
> >>
> >> Thanks, and I hope to see you in Tokyo.
> >>
> >> Bill
> >>
> >> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> >> William E. Allcock
> >> Argonne National Laboratory
> >> Bldg 221, Office B-139
> >> 9700 South Cass Ave
> >> Argonne, IL 60439-4844
> >> Email:           allcock at mcs.anl.gov
> >> Office Phone:    +1-630-252-7573
> >> Office Fax:      +1-630-252-1997
> >> Cell Phone:      +1-630-854-2842
> >>
> >> <charter-v3.doc>
> >
> >
> 
> -- 
> Bob Wood
> Network Storage Architecture Office
> Sun Microsystems Inc.
> 
> 303.395.3801 (x43011)
> Robert.B.Wood at Sun.com
> 
> 
[attachment "charter-v4.doc" deleted by Allen Luniewski/Almaden/IBM] 
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