English

HTCondor data movement at 100 Gbps

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2021-11-02 v1

Abstract

HTCondor is a major workload management system used in distributed high throughput computing (dHTC) environments, e.g., the Open Science Grid. One of the distinguishing features of HTCondor is the native support for data movement, allowing it to operate without a shared filesystem. Coupling data handling and compute scheduling is both convenient for users and allows for significant infrastructure flexibility but does introduce some limitations. The default HTCondor data transfer mechanism routes both the input and output data through the submission node, making it a potential bottleneck. In this document we show that by using a node equipped with a 100 Gbps network interface (NIC) HTCondor can serve data at up to 90 Gbps, which is sufficient for most current use cases, as it would saturate the border network links of most research universities at the time of writing.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2107.03947,
  title  = {HTCondor data movement at 100 Gbps},
  author = {Igor Sfiligoi and Frank Würthwein and Thomas DeFanti and John Graham},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.03947},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

2 pages, 2 figures, to be published in proceedings of eScience 2021

R2 v1 2026-06-24T04:00:34.620Z