Paper detail

Hadoop on HPC: Integrating Hadoop and Pilot-based Dynamic Resource Management

High-performance computing platforms such as supercomputers have traditionally been designed to meet the compute demands of scientific applications. Consequently, they have been architected as producers and not consumers of data. The Apache Hadoop ecosystem has evolved to meet the requirements of data processing applications and has addressed many of the limitations of HPC platforms. There exist a class of scientific applications however, that need the collective capabilities of traditional high-performance computing environments and the Apache Hadoop ecosystem. For example, the scientific domains of bio-molecular dynamics, genomics and network science need to couple traditional computing with Hadoop/Spark based analysis. We investigate the critical question of how to present the capabilities of both computing environments to such scientific applications. Whereas this questions needs answers at multiple levels, we focus on the design of resource management middleware that might support the needs of both. We propose extensions to the Pilot-Abstraction to provide a unifying resource management layer. This is an important step that allows applications to integrate HPC stages (e.g. simulations) to data analytics. Many supercomputing centers have started to officially support Hadoop environments, either in a dedicated environment or in hybrid deployments using tools such as myHadoop. This typically involves many intrinsic, environment-specific details that need to be mastered, and often swamp conceptual issues like: How best to couple HPC and Hadoop application stages? How to explore runtime trade-offs (data localities vs. data movement)? This paper provides both conceptual understanding and practical solutions to the integrated use of HPC and Hadoop environments.

preprint2016arXivOpen access
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