English

The LBNL Superfacility Project Report

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2022-06-29 v2

Abstract

The Superfacility model is designed to leverage HPC for experimental science. It is more than simply a model of connected experiment, network, and HPC facilities; it encompasses the full ecosystem of infrastructure, software, tools, and expertise needed to make connected facilities easy to use. The three-year Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) Superfacility project was initiated in 2019 to coordinate work being performed at LBNL to support this model, and to provide a coherent and comprehensive set of science requirements to drive existing and new work. A key component of the project was the in-depth engagements with eight science teams that represent challenging use cases across the DOE Office of Science. By the close of the project, we met our project goal by enabling our science application engagements to demonstrate automated pipelines that analyze data from remote facilities at large scale, without routine human intervention. In several cases, we have gone beyond demonstrations and now provide production-level services. To achieve this goal, the Superfacility team developed tools, infrastructure, and policies for near-real-time computing support, dynamic high-performance networking, data management and movement tools, API-driven automation, HPC-scale notebooks via Jupyter, authentication using Federated Identity and container-based edge services supported. The lessons we learned during this project provide a valuable model for future large, complex, cross-disciplinary collaborations. There is a pressing need for a coherent computing infrastructure across national facilities, and LBNL's Superfacility project is a unique model for success in tackling the challenges that will be faced in hardware, software, policies, and services across multiple science domains.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2206.11992,
  title  = {The LBNL Superfacility Project Report},
  author = {Deborah Bard and Cory Snavely and Lisa Gerhardt and Jason Lee and Becci Totzke and Katie Antypas and William Arndt and Johannes Blaschke and Suren Byna and Ravi Cheema and Shreyas Cholia and Mark Day and Bjoern Enders and Aditi Gaur and Annette Greiner and Taylor Groves and Mariam Kiran and Quincey Koziol and Tom Lehman and Kelly Rowland and Chris Samuel and Ashwin Selvarajan and Alex Sim and David Skinner and Laurie Stephey and Rollin Thomas and Gabor Torok},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2206.11992},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

85 pages, 23 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T12:02:29.079Z