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Workflows Community Summit 2022: A Roadmap Revolution

Authors :
da Silva, Rafael Ferreira
Badia, Rosa M.
Bala, Venkat
Bard, Debbie
Bremer, Peer-Timo
Buckley, Ian
Caino-Lores, Silvina
Chard, Kyle
Goble, Carole
Jha, Shantenu
Katz, Daniel S.
Laney, Daniel
Parashar, Manish
Suter, Frederic
Tyler, Nick
Uram, Thomas
Altintas, Ilkay
Andersson, Stefan
Arndt, William
Aznar, Juan
Bader, Jonathan
Balis, Bartosz
Blanton, Chris
Braghetto, Kelly Rosa
Brodutch, Aharon
Brunk, Paul
Casanova, Henri
Lierta, Alba Cervera
Chigu, Justin
Coleman, Taina
Collier, Nick
Colonnelli, Iacopo
Coppens, Frederik
Crusoe, Michael
Cunningham, Will
Kinoshita, Bruno de Paula
Di Tommaso, Paolo
Doutriaux, Charles
Downton, Matthew
Elwasif, Wael
Enders, Bjoern
Erdmann, Chris
Fahringer, Thomas
Figueiredo, Ludmilla
Filgueira, Rosa
Foltin, Martin
Fouilloux, Anne
Gadelha, Luiz
Gallo, Andy
Saez, Artur Garcia
Garijo, Daniel
Gerlach, Roman
Grant, Ryan
Grayson, Samuel
Grubel, Patricia
Gustafsson, Johan
Hayot-Sasson, Valerie
Hernandez, Oscar
Hilbrich, Marcus
Justine, AnnMary
Laflotte, Ian
Lehmann, Fabian
Luckow, Andre
Luettgau, Jakob
Maheshwari, Ketan
Matsuda, Motohiko
Medic, Doriana
Mendygral, Pete
Michalewicz, Marek
Nonaka, Jorji
Pawlik, Maciej
Pottier, Loic
Pouchard, Line
Putz, Mathias
Radha, Santosh Kumar
Ramakrishnan, Lavanya
Ristov, Sashko
Romano, Paul
Rosendo, Daniel
Ruefenacht, Martin
Rycerz, Katarzyna
Saurabh, Nishant
Savchenko, Volodymyr
Schulz, Martin
Simpson, Christine
Sirvent, Raul
Skluzacek, Tyler
Soiland-Reyes, Stian
Souza, Renan
Sukumar, Sreenivas Rangan
Sun, Ziheng
Sussman, Alan
Thain, Douglas
Titov, Mikhail
Tovar, Benjamin
Tripathy, Aalap
Turilli, Matteo
Tuznik, Bartosz
van Dam, Hubertus
Vivas, Aurelio
Ward, Logan
Widener, Patrick
Wilkinson, Sean
Zawalska, Justyna
Zulfiqar, Mahnoor
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Scientific workflows have become integral tools in broad scientific computing use cases. Science discovery is increasingly dependent on workflows to orchestrate large and complex scientific experiments that range from execution of a cloud-based data preprocessing pipeline to multi-facility instrument-to-edge-to-HPC computational workflows. Given the changing landscape of scientific computing and the evolving needs of emerging scientific applications, it is paramount that the development of novel scientific workflows and system functionalities seek to increase the efficiency, resilience, and pervasiveness of existing systems and applications. Specifically, the proliferation of machine learning/artificial intelligence (ML/AI) workflows, need for processing large scale datasets produced by instruments at the edge, intensification of near real-time data processing, support for long-term experiment campaigns, and emergence of quantum computing as an adjunct to HPC, have significantly changed the functional and operational requirements of workflow systems. Workflow systems now need to, for example, support data streams from the edge-to-cloud-to-HPC enable the management of many small-sized files, allow data reduction while ensuring high accuracy, orchestrate distributed services (workflows, instruments, data movement, provenance, publication, etc.) across computing and user facilities, among others. Further, to accelerate science, it is also necessary that these systems implement specifications/standards and APIs for seamless (horizontal and vertical) integration between systems and applications, as well as enabling the publication of workflows and their associated products according to the FAIR principles. This document reports on discussions and findings from the 2022 international edition of the Workflows Community Summit that took place on November 29 and 30, 2022.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2304.00019
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7750670