[ogsa-wg] CFP - AGNM 2006

Masum Hasan (masum) masum at cisco.com
Wed May 10 04:17:37 CDT 2006


Call for Papers 

=================

 

AGNM 2006

 

 

 

Second IEEE/IFIP International Workshop on Autonomic Grid Networking and Management 

 

October 26th-27th, 2006,

Herbert Park Hotel, Dublin, Ireland

 

Held as part of the IEEE/IFIP 2nd International Week on Management of Networks and Services

 

Website: http://www.manweek2006.org/agnm/agnm.php 

 

Autonomic Grid Computing (AGC) deals with self-managing and self-adapting parallel and 

distributed computing and associated data management on a distributed and parallel Grid 

of computational machines (PCs, servers, supercomputers, clusters) and storage systems. 

 

Grid computing is performed with the support of two major infrastructure components: 

1) a Grid middleware, such as Globus or UNICORE, which provides advanced services

and supports Grid resource management, and 2) a fabric layer, which comprises

the underlying systems, such as computers, operating systems, and storage systems.

A fabric layer component of particular importance is the network since all distributed

services rely on the capabilities of the interconnecting network. 

 

Recently, the Grid Community has started efforts to enhance the core services of a 

Grid middleware with autonomic capabilities so that the functions are self-managing. 

For example, an autonomic Grid resource allocation manager, instead of statically 

allocating or releasing resources to Grid applications, could do so adaptively, or 

self-heal to failures. However, the AGC and associated infrastructure (AGCI) is geared 

mainly towards computational (servers, supercomputers) and storage resources. In other 

words, the autonomic behavior of AGC and AGCI is a function of changes in computational

and storage resources, but not networking resources. Hence there is need for support 

of Autonomic Grid  Networks (AGN)  that incorporates into the Grid the following:

1) Network resources distributed across LAN, MAN and WAN, 2) Autonomic and on-demand

functions (into various layers and components, such as a Grid middleware). The

autonomic functions may be conceptually similar to the ones provided in the lower

layer (Layers 3, 2, 1) networks, such as self-control (dynamic rerouting, such as

IGP rerouting), self-protection ([G]MPLS Fast Rerouting and Protection, Sonet/SDH

protection switching), and self-healing (control and data plane high-availability,

etc.). For example, in a typical Grid, the resource management architecture is

client-server oriented, where resources are typically registered to and pulled

from a particular service. In contrast, in an AGN, the resource management

architecture could be distributed and autonomous, where resource requests are

routed by autonomous and distributed AGN middleware components.

 

This one-day workshop offers a unique opportunity for researchers and practitioners to 

exchange ideas and experiences on problems, challenges, solutions and potential future 

research and development issues in this new field of Autonomic Grid Networking and 

Management. In addition to paper presentations, the workshop provides an intimate

setting for discussion and debate through panels and group work. 

 

The authors are encouraged to submit original papers on topics related to the concepts

described above, including, but not limited to:

 

- Grid middleware enhancements for AGN

- Cluster middleware enhancements for AGN

- Network-aware autonomic Grid scheduling

- Network-aware autonomic Grid data and storage management

- Network-aware autonomic cluster scheduling and management

- AGN specific resource discovery

- AGN QoS (combined application and abstracted network QoS) management

- AGN routing

- AGN self-healing and self-protection

- AGN high-availability

- AGN monitoring and performance management

- AGN effects on HPC applications  

- HPC applications (MPI and other) on AGN

- HPC applications (MPI and other) on MAN and WAN AGN

- Commercial applications (CRM, ERP, Financial, etc.) on AGN

- P2P AGN

 

 

Submission

----------

 

For online submission instructions please visit 

http://www.manweek2006.org/agnm/submission.php 

Questions should be directed to agnm06 at anut.fh-aachen.de 

 

 

IMPORTANT DEADLINES

-------------------

 

Submission: May 19 2006

Notification: July 7 2006

Camera ready: August 2 2006

Workshop: October 26-27 2006

 

 

Organizing Committee:

---------------------

 

Workshop Chair: Masum Z. Hasan (Cisco Systems, USA)

Workshop TPC Co-chairs: Volker Sander (University of Aachen, Germany)

and Silvia Figueira (Santa Clara University, USA)

 

 

Technical Programme Committee

-----------------------------      

 

Lina Battestilli, MCNC, USA

Raouf Boutaba, U Waterloo, Canada

Rob Brennan, Ericsson R&D, Ireland

Wayne Clark, Cisco Systems, USA

Asit Dan, IBM Watson Research C, USA

Cees DeLaat, U Amsterdam, Netherlands

Gabi Dreo-Rodosek, LRZ, Germany

Horst Dumcke, Cisco Systems, France

Tiziana Ferrari, INFN, Italy

Markus Fidler, U Toronto, Canada

Silvia Figueira, SCU, USA

Wolfgang Gentzsch, MCNC, USA

Rüdiger Geib, T-Systems, Germany

Masum Z. Hasan, Cisco Systems, USA

Michiaki Hayashi, KDDI, Japan

Doan B. Hoang, U Sydney, Australia

Admela Jukan, UIUC, USA

Gigi Karmous-Edwards, MCNC, USA

Francis Lee, NTU, Singapore

Edgar Magaña, UPC, Spain

J.P. Martin-Flatin, UQAM, Canada

Manish Parashar, Rutgers U, USA

Gerard Parr, University of Ulster, UK

Pascale Primet, INRIA, France

Volker Sander, U Aachen, Germany

Dimitra Simeonidou, U Essex, UK

John Strassner, Motorola Lab, USA

Franco Travostino, Nortel Networks, USA

Michael Welzl, U Innsbruck, Austria

Peter Tomsu, Cisco Systems, Autria

Yufeng Xin, MCNC, USA

 

 

 

 

 

--Masum

http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~zmhasan/ <http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~zmhasan/> 



 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.ogf.org/pipermail/ogsa-wg/attachments/20060510/4b586c96/attachment.html 


More information about the ogsa-wg mailing list