S. Ryu
Argonne National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by S. Ryu.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015
J. Anderson; A. Borga; H. Boterenbrood; H. Chen; K. Chen; G. Drake; D. Francis; B. Gorini; Francesco Lanni; G. Lehmann Miotto; L. J. Levinson; J. Narevicius; Christian Plessl; A. Roich; S. Ryu; F. Schreuder; J. Schumacher; W. Vandelli; J. C. Vermeulen; J. Zhang
The ATLAS experiment at CERN is planning full deployment of a new unified optical link technology for connecting detector front end electronics on the timescale of the LHC Run 4 (2025). It is estimated that roughly 8000 GBT (GigaBit Transceiver) links, with transfer rates up to 10.24 Gbps, will replace existing links used for readout, detector control and distribution of timing and trigger information. A new class of devices will be needed to interface many GBT links to the rest of the trigger, data-acquisition and detector control systems. In this paper FELIX (Front End LInk eXchange) is presented, a PC-based device to route data from and to multiple GBT links via a high-performance general purpose network capable of a total throughput up to O(20 Tbps). FELIX implies architectural changes to the ATLAS data acquisition system, such as the use of industry standard COTS components early in the DAQ chain. Additionally the design and implementation of a FELIX demonstration platform is presented and hardware and software aspects will be discussed.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2016
J. Anderson; K. Bauer; A. Borga; H. Boterenbrood; H. Chen; K. Chen; G. Drake; M. Dönszelmann; D. Francis; D. Guest; B. Gorini; M. Joos; Francesco Lanni; G. Lehmann Miotto; L. J. Levinson; J. Narevicius; W. Panduro Vazquez; A. Roich; S. Ryu; F. Schreuder; J. Schumacher; W. Vandelli; J. C. Vermeulen; Daniel Whiteson; Weihao Wu; J. Zhang
The ATLAS Phase-I upgrade (2019) requires a Trigger and Data Acquisition (TDAQ) system able to trigger and record data from up to three times the nominal LHC instantaneous luminosity. The Front-End LInk eXchange (FELIX) system provides an infrastructure to achieve this in a scalable, detector agnostic and easily upgradeable way. It is a PC-based gateway, interfacing custom radiation tolerant optical links from front-end electronics, via PCIe Gen3 cards, to a commodity switched Ethernet or InfiniBand network. FELIX enables reducing custom electronics in favour of software running on commercial servers. The FELIX system, the design of the PCIe prototype card and the integration test results are presented in this paper.