Software-Defined Network Solutions for Science Scenarios
Author(s) -
Nageswara S. V. Rao,
Qiang Liu,
Satyabrata Sen,
Raj Kettimuthu,
Josh Boley,
Bradley W. Settlemyer,
Hsing B. Chen,
Dimitrios Katramatos,
Dantong Yu
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3154273.3154336
Subject(s) - testbed , computer science , workflow , software defined networking , distributed computing , software , throughput , scripting language , virtual machine , computer network , operating system , database , wireless
High-performance scientific workflows utilize supercomputers, scientific instruments, and large storage systems. Their executions require fast setup of a small number of dedicated network connections across the geographically distributed facility sites. We present Software-Defined Network (SDN) solutions consisting of site daemons that use dpctl, Floodlight, ONOS, or OpenDaylight controllers to set up these connections. The development of these SDN solutions could be quite disruptive to the infrastructure, while requiring a close coordination among multiple sites; in addition, the large number of possible controller and device combinations to investigate could make the infrastructure unavailable to regular users for extended periods of time. In response, we develop a Virtual Science Network Environment (VSNE) using virtual machines, Mininet, and custom scripts that support the development, testing, and evaluation of SDN solutions, without the constraints and expenses of multi-site physical infrastructures; furthermore, the chosen solutions can be directly transferred to production deployments. By complementing VSNE with a physical testbed, we conduct targeted performance tests of various SDN solutions to help choose the best candidates. In addition, we propose a switching response method to assess the setup times and throughput performances of different SDN solutions, and present experimental results that show their advantages and limitations.
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