Abstract

During operations, NOvA produces between 5,000 and 7,000 raw files per day with peaks in excess of 12,000. These files must be processed in several stages to produce fully calibrated and reconstructed analysis files. In addition, many simulated neutrino interactions must be produced and processed through the same stages as data. To accommodate the large volume of data and Monte Carlo, production must be possible both on the Fermilab grid and on off-site farms, such as the ones accessible through the Open Science Grid. To handle the challenge of cataloging these files and to facilitate their off-line processing, we have adopted the SAM system developed at Fermilab. SAM indexes files according to metadata, keeps track of each file's physical locations, provides dataset management facilities, and facilitates data transfer to off-site grids. To integrate SAM with Fermilab's art software framework and the NOvA production workflow, we have developed methods to embed metadata into our configuration files, art files, and standalone ROOT files. A module in the art framework propagates the embedded information from configuration files into art files, and from input art files to output art files, allowing us to maintain a complete processing history within our files. Embedding metadata in configuration files also allows configuration files indexed in SAM to be used as inputs to Monte Carlo production jobs. Further, SAM keeps track of the input files used to create each output file. Parentage information enables the construction of self-draining datasets which have become the primary production paradigm used at NOvA. In this paper we will present an overview of SAM at NOvA and how it has transformed the file production framework used by the experiment.

Highlights

  • NOνA [1] is a two-detector, long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiment located 14 mrad offaxis from the NuMI [2] neutrino beam and is designed to measure the oscillation probabilities for νμ → νe and νμ → νe

  • Summary Early in the life cycle of the NOνA experiment, it was possible to store all files on central NFS storage and run jobs on the local grid using explicit file lists

  • In order to move to system with a mixture of central NFS storage, cache disks, and tape, and to utilize both local and off-site computing resources, NOνA has migrated to using tools based around the SAM data handling system

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Summary

Data handling with SAM and art at the NOνA experiment

This content has been downloaded from IOPscience. Please scroll down to see the full text. Ser. 664 042001 (http://iopscience.iop.org/1742-6596/664/4/042001) View the table of contents for this issue, or go to the journal homepage for more. Download details: IP Address: 131.215.70.231 This content was downloaded on 22/04/2016 at 22:23 Please note that terms and conditions apply. 21st International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP2015) IOP Publishing. Journal of Physics: Conference Series 664 (2015) 042001 doi:10.1088/1742-6596/664/4/042001

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