Popis: |
High-energy physics faces unprecedented computing challenges in preparation for the 'high-luminosity' phase of the Large Hadron Collider, which will be known as the HL-LHC. The complexity of particle-collision events will increase, together with the data collection rate, substantially outstripping the gains expected from technology evolution. The LHC experiments, through the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG), operate a distributed computing infrastructure at about 170 sites over more than 40 countries. This infrastructure has successfully exploited the exabyte of data collected and processed during the first 10 years of the program. During the HL-LHC regime, each experiment will collect an exabyte of data annually and additional computing resources will be needed. The efficient use of HPC facilities may be an important opportunity to address the anticipated resource gap. In this talk, I will discuss the future computing needs in high-energy physics and how these can be met combining our dedicated distributed computing infrastructure with large-scale HPC sites. As a community, we have identified common challenges for integrating these large facilities into our computing ecosystem. I will also discuss the current progress in addressing those challenges, focusing on software development for heterogeneous architectures, data management at scale, supporting services and opportunities for collaboration. |