In our demonstration we present Trident, a scientific workflow workbench
built on top of a commercial workflow system to leverage existing
functionality to the extent possible. Trident is being developed
in collaboration with the scientific computing community for use
in a number of ongoing eScience projects that make use of scientific
workflows, in particular the Pan-STARRS sky survey project and the
Ocean Observatory Initiative. In our demonstration of Trident we
will illustrate the ability to utilize both local and cloud resources
for storage and execution, as well as services such as provenance,
monitoring, logging and scheduling workflows over clusters. Our goal
is to release Trident in early 2009 as an open source accelerator
for others to use for eScience projects and to continue extending
with support for new workflow features and services.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Barga:escience:2008
%A Barga, Roger
%A Jackson, Jared
%A Araujo, Nelson
%A Guo, Dean
%A Gautam, Nitin
%A Simmhan, Yogesh
%B International Conference on eScience (eScience)
%D 2008
%I IEEE
%K demo, escience, msr, neptune, panstarrs, peer reviewed trident, workflows,
%P 317-318
%R 10.1109/eScience.2008.126
%T The Trident Scientific Workflow Workbench
%X In our demonstration we present Trident, a scientific workflow workbench
built on top of a commercial workflow system to leverage existing
functionality to the extent possible. Trident is being developed
in collaboration with the scientific computing community for use
in a number of ongoing eScience projects that make use of scientific
workflows, in particular the Pan-STARRS sky survey project and the
Ocean Observatory Initiative. In our demonstration of Trident we
will illustrate the ability to utilize both local and cloud resources
for storage and execution, as well as services such as provenance,
monitoring, logging and scheduling workflows over clusters. Our goal
is to release Trident in early 2009 as an open source accelerator
for others to use for eScience projects and to continue extending
with support for new workflow features and services.
@inproceedings{Barga:escience:2008,
abstract = {In our demonstration we present Trident, a scientific workflow workbench
built on top of a commercial workflow system to leverage existing
functionality to the extent possible. Trident is being developed
in collaboration with the scientific computing community for use
in a number of ongoing eScience projects that make use of scientific
workflows, in particular the Pan-STARRS sky survey project and the
Ocean Observatory Initiative. In our demonstration of Trident we
will illustrate the ability to utilize both local and cloud resources
for storage and execution, as well as services such as provenance,
monitoring, logging and scheduling workflows over clusters. Our goal
is to release Trident in early 2009 as an open source accelerator
for others to use for eScience projects and to continue extending
with support for new workflow features and services.},
added-at = {2014-08-13T04:08:36.000+0200},
author = {Barga, Roger and Jackson, Jared and Araujo, Nelson and Guo, Dean and Gautam, Nitin and Simmhan, Yogesh},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2efcc7afbaa912cd63ae9afc7d097cdad/simmhan},
booktitle = {International Conference on eScience (eScience)},
doi = {10.1109/eScience.2008.126},
interhash = {2b0966d9420ef6cf5ec17d6370a85ca9},
intrahash = {efcc7afbaa912cd63ae9afc7d097cdad},
keywords = {demo, escience, msr, neptune, panstarrs, peer reviewed trident, workflows,},
note = {Demo [CORE A]},
owner = {Simmhan},
pages = {317-318},
publisher = {IEEE},
timestamp = {2014-08-13T04:08:36.000+0200},
title = {The Trident Scientific Workflow Workbench},
year = 2008
}