EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2019)

Producing Madgraph5_aMC@NLO gridpacks and using TensorFlow GPU resources in the CMS HTCondor Global Pool

  • Bockelman Brian Paul,
  • Fajardo Hernandez Edgar,
  • Davila Foyo Diego,
  • Hurtado Anampa Kenyi,
  • Aftab Khan Farrukh,
  • Larson Krista,
  • Letts James,
  • Mascheroni Marco,
  • Mason David,
  • Perez-Calero Yzquierdo Antonio,
  • Trendafilovz Ivanov Todor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201921403004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 214
p. 03004

Abstract

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The CMS experiment has an HTCondor Global Pool, composed of more than 200K CPU cores available for Monte Carlo production and the analysis of da.The submission of user jobs to this pool is handled by either CRAB, the standard workflow management tool used by CMS users to submit analysis jobs requiring event processing of large amounts of data, or by CMS Connect, a service focused on final stage condor-like analysis jobs and applications that already have a workflow job manager in place. The latest scenario canbring cases in which workflows need further adjustments in order to efficiently work in a globally distributed pool of resources. For instance, the generation of matrix elements for high energy physics processes via Madgraph5_aMC@NLO and the usage of tools not (yet) fully supported by the CMS software, such as Ten-sorFlow with GPUsupport, are tasks with particular requirements. A special adaption, either at the pool factory level (advertising GPU resources) or at the execute level (e.g: to handle special parameters that describe certain needs for the remote execute nodes during submission) is needed in order to adequately work in the CMS global pool. This contribution describes the challenges and efforts performed towards adaptingsuch workflows so they can properly profit from the Global Pool via CMS Connect.