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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Mallmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Mallmann.


parallel computing | 2005

Unicore — From project results to production grids

Achim Streit; Dietmar W. Erwin; Thomas Lippert; Daniel Mallmann; Roger Menday; Michael Rambadt; Morris Riedel; Mathilde Romberg; Bernd Schuller; Philipp Wieder

The UNICORE Grid-technology provides a seamless, secure and intuitive access to distributed Grid resources. In this paper we present the recent evolution from project results to production Grids. At the beginning UNICORE was developed as a prototype software in two projects funded by the German research ministry (BMBF). Over the following years, in various European-funded projects, UNICORE evolved to a full-grown and well-tested Grid middleware system, which today is used in daily production at many supercomputing centers worldwide. Beyond this production usage, the UNICORE technology serves as a solid basis in many European and International research projects, which use existing UNICORE components to implement advanced features, high level services, and support for applications from a growing range of domains. In order to foster these ongoing developments, UNICORE is available as open source under BSD licence at Source Forge, where new releases are published on a regular basis. This paper is a review of the UNICORE achievements so far and gives a glimpse on the UNICORE roadmap.


international conference on e science | 2006

GridBeans: Support e-Science and Grid Applications

Ralf Ratering; Alexander S. Lukichev; Morris Riedel; Daniel Mallmann; Andrea Vanni; Claudio Cacciari; S. Lanzarini; Krzysztof Benedyczak; Marcelina Borcz; R. Kluszcynski; Piotr Bała; Gert Ohme

Large-scale scientific research often relies on the collaborative use of Grid and e-Science infrastructures that provide computational or storage related resources. One of the ideas of these modern infrastructures is to facilitate the routine interaction of scientists and their workflows with advanced problem solving tools and computational resources. While many production Grid projects and e-Science infrastructures have begun to offer services for the usage of resources to end-users during the past several years, the corresponding emerging standards defined by GGF and OASIS still appear to be in flux. In this paper, we present the GridBean technology that bridges the gap between the constantly changing basic Grid or e-Science infrastructures and the need of stable application development environments for the Grid users.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2005

Steering UNICORE applications with VISIT

Thomas Eickermann; Wolfgang Frings; Paul Gibbon; Lidia Kirtchakova; Daniel Mallmann; Anke Visser

The UNICORE (UNiform Interface to COmputing REsources) software provides a Grid infrastructure together with a computing portal for engineers and scientists to access supercomputer centres from anywhere on the Internet. While UNICORE is primarily designed for the submission and control of batch jobs, it is also feasible to establish an on-line connection between an application and the UNICORE user-client. This opens up the possibility of performing on-line visualization and computational steering of applications under UNICORE control while maintaining the security provided by this system. This contribution describes the design of a steering extension to UNICORE based on the steering toolkit VISIT (VISualization Interface Toolkit). VISIT is a lightweight library that supports bidirectional data exchange between visualizations and parallel applications. As an example application, a parallel simulation of a laser-plasma interaction that can be steered by an AVS/Express application is presented.


international conference on e science | 2007

Open Standards-Based Interoperability of Job Submission and Management Interfaces across the Grid Middleware Platforms gLite and UNICORE

Moreno Marzolla; Paolo Andreetto; Valerio Venturi; Andrea Ferraro; S. Memon; B. Twedell; Morris Riedel; Daniel Mallmann; Achim Streit; S. van de Berghe; V. Li; David Snelling; Katerina Stamou; Zeeshan Ali Shah; Fredrik Hedman

In a distributed grid environment with ambitious service demands the job submission and management interfaces provide functionality of major importance. Emerging e-science and grid infrastructures such as EGEE and DEISA rely on highly available services that are capable of managing scientific jobs. It is the adoption of emerging open standard interfaces which allows the distribution of grid resources in such a way that their actual service implementation or grid technologies are not isolated from each other, especially when these resources are deployed in different e-science infrastructures that consist of different types of computational resources. This paper motivates the interoperability of these infrastructures and discusses solutions. We describe the adoption of various open standards that recently emerged from the open grid forum (OGF) in the field of job submission and management by well-known grid technologies, respectively gLite and UNICORE. This has a fundamental impact on the interoperability between these technologies and thus within the next generation e-science infrastructures that rely on these technologies.


enterprise distributed object computing | 2007

Web Services Interfaces and Open Standards Integration into the European UNICORE 6 Grid Middleware

Morris Riedel; Bernd Schuller; Daniel Mallmann; Roger Menday; Achim Streit; Bastian Tweddell; M. Shahbaz Memon; A. Shiraz Memon; Bastian Demuth; Thomas Lippert; David Snelling; S. van den Berghe; V. Li; M. Drescher; A. Geiger; G. Ohme; A. Vanni; C. Cacciari; S. Lanzarini; Paolo Malfetti; Krzysztof Benedyczak; Piotr Bała; R. Ratering; A. Lukichev

The UNICORE grid system provides a seamless, secure and intuitive access to distributed grid resources. In recent years, UNICORE 5 is used as a well-tested grid middleware system in production grids (e.g. DEISA, D-Grid) and at many supercomputer centers world-wide. Beyond this production usage, UNICORE serves as a solid basis in many European and International research projects and business scenarios from T-Systems, Philips Research, Intel, Fujitsu and others. To foster ongoing developments in multiple projects, UNICORE is open source under BSD license at SourceForge. More recently, the new Web services-based UNICORE 6 has become available that is based on open standards such as the Web services addressing (WS-A) and the Web services resource framework (WS-RF) and thus conforms to the open grid services architecture (OGSA) of the open grid forum (OGF). In this paper we present the evolution from production UNICORE 5 to the open standards-based UNICORE 6 and its various Web services-based interfaces. It describes the interface integration of emerging open standards such as OGSA-BES and OGSA-RUS and thus provides an overview of UNICORE 6.


european conference on parallel processing | 2007

Using SAML-based VOMS for authorization within web services-based UNICORE grids

Valerio Venturi; Morris Riedel; A. Shiraz Memon; M. Shahbaz Memon; Federico Stagni; Bernd Schuller; Daniel Mallmann; Bastian Tweddell; Alberto Gianoli; Sven van den Berghe; David Snelling; Achim Streit

In recent years, the Virtual Organization Membership Service (VOMS) emerged within Grid infrastructures providing dynamic, fine-grained, access control needed to enable resource sharing across Virtual Organization (VOs). VOMS allows to manage authorization information in a VO scope to enforce agreements established between VOs and resource owners. VOMS is used for authorization in the EGEE and OSG infrastructures and is a core component of the respective middleware stacks gLite and VDT. While a module for supporting VOMS is also available as part of the authorization service of the Globus Toolkit, there is currently no support for VO-level authorization within the new Web services-based UNICORE 6. This paper describes the evolution of VOMS towards an open standard compliant service based on the Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML), which in turn provides mechanisms to fill the VO-level authorization service gap within Web service-based UNICORE Grids. In addition, the SAML-based VOMS allows for cross middleware VO management through open standards.


grid computing | 2007

Design and evaluation of a collaborative online visualization and steering framework implementation for computational grids

Morris Riedel; Thomas Eickermann; Wolfgang Frings; Sonja Dominiczak; Daniel Mallmann; Thomas Düssel; Achim Streit; Paul Gibbon; Felix Wolf; Wolfram Schiffmann; Thomas Lippert

Todays large-scale scientific research often relies on the collaborative use of a Grid or c-Science infrastructure (e.g. DEISA, EGEE, TeraGrid, OSG) with computational, storage, or other types of physical resources. One of the goals of these emerging infrastructures is to support the work of scientists with advanced problem-solving tools. Many e-Science applications within these infrastructures aim at simulations of a scientific problem on powerful parallel computing resources. Typically, a researcher first performs a simulation for some fixed amount of time and then analyses results in a separate post-processing step, for instance, by viewing results in visualizations. In earlier work we have described early prototypes of a Collaborative Online Visualization and Steering (COVS) Framework in Grids that performs both -simulation and visualization -at the same time (online) to increase the efficiency of e-Scientists. This paper evaluates the evolved mature reference implementation of the COVS framework design that is ready for production usage within Web service-based Grid and e-Science infrastructures.


ieee international conference on cloud computing technology and science | 2010

elasticLM: A Novel Approach for Software Licensing in Distributed Computing Infrastructures

Claudio Cacciari; Francesco D'Andria; Miriam Gozalo; Björn Hagemeier; Daniel Mallmann; Josep Martrat; David Garcia Perez; Angela Rumpl; Wolfgang Ziegler; Csilla Zsigri

A recent survey of the 451group on Cloud usage highlights software licensing as one of the top five obstacles for Cloud computing, quite similar to what has been observed in the Grid already a couple of years. The reasons are the same: the current praxis of software licensing, both in terms of business models and licensing technology. As a consequence, using commercial applications that require access to a license server for authorisation at run-time has been quite limited until recently in distributed computing environments, especially when the environment stretches across administrative domains like it is the case for public Clouds. In this paper we present a novel approach for managing software licenses as web service resources in distributed service oriented environments. Licenses become mobile objects, which may move to the environment where required to authorise the execution of a license protected application.


international symposium on parallel and distributed computing | 2007

VISIT/GS: Higher Level Grid Services for Scientific Collaborative Online Visualization and Steering in UNICORE Grids

Morris Riedel; Wolfgang Frings; Sonja Dominiczak; Thomas Eickermann; Daniel Mallmann; Paul Gibbon; Thomas Düssel

Many production Grid infrastructures such as DEISA, EGEE, or TeraGrid have begun to offer services to endusers that include access to computational resources. The major goal of these infrastructures is to facilitate the routine interaction of scientists and their workflows with advanced tools and seamless access to computational resources via Grid middleware systems such as UNICORE, gLite or Globus Toolkits. While UNICORE 5 is used in production Grids since several years, recently an early prototype of the new Web services-based UNICORE 6 became available that will be continuously improved in the next months for its use in production. In absence of a widely accepted framework for visualization and steering, the new UNICORE 6 Grid middleware provides not such a higher level service by default. This motivates this contribution to support e-Scientists in upcoming WS-based UNICORE Grids with visualization and steering techniques. In this paper we present the augmentation of the early standards-based UNICORE 6 prototype with a higher-level service for collaborative online visualization and steering. It describes the seamless integration of this service within UNICORE Grids by retaining the convenient single sign-on feature.


Future Generation Computer Systems | 2012

SLA-based management of software licenses as web service resources in distributed computing infrastructures

Claudio Cacciari; Daniel Mallmann; Csilla Zsigri; Francesco D'Andria; Björn Hagemeier; Angela Rumpl; Wolfgang Ziegler; Josep Martrat

Until recently the use of applications requiring a software license for execution was quite limited in distributed environments. Due to the mandatory centralised control of license usage at application runtime, e.g. heartbeat control by the license server running at the home site of a user, traditional software licensing practices are not suitable especially when the distributed computing infrastructure stretches across administrative domains. In this paper we present a novel approach for managing software licenses as web service resources in distributed service oriented environments. Licenses become mobile objects, which may travel to the environment where required to authorise the execution of a license protected application. A first implementation has been realised for dynamic Grid environments in the European SmartLM project co-funded by the European Commission. The SmartLM solution decouples authorisation for license usage from authorisation for application execution. All authorisations are expressed as and guaranteed by Service Level Agreements. We will present the core technology, discuss various security aspects and how they are addressed in the SmartLM prototype, and present the evaluation of the prototype through a number of usage scenarios. Finally, we will give an outlook on specific issues and current work extending the solution to Clouds and service based systems in general.

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Morris Riedel

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Achim Streit

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Thomas Lippert

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Bernd Schuller

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Felix Wolf

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Wolfgang Frings

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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