Abstract

Physics analysis at the Compact Muon Solenoid requires both the production of simulated events and processing of the data collected by the experiment. Since the end of the LHC Run-I in 2012, CMS has produced over 20 billion simulated events, from 75 thousand processing requests organised in one hundred different campaigns. These campaigns emulate different configurations of collision events, the detector, and LHC running conditions. In the same time span, sixteen data processing campaigns have taken place to reconstruct different portions of the Run-I and Run-II data with ever improving algorithms and calibrations. The scale and complexity of the events simulation and processing, and the requirement that multiple campaigns must proceed in parallel, demand that a comprehensive, frequently updated and easily accessible monitoring be made available. The monitoring must serve both the analysts, who want to know which and when datasets will become available, and the central production teams in charge of submitting, prioritizing, and running the requests across the distributed computing infrastructure. The Production Monitoring Platform (pMp) web-based service, has been developed in 2015 to address those needs. It aggregates information from multiple services used to define, organize, and run the processing requests. Information is updated hourly using a dedicated elastic database and the monitoring provides multiple configurable views to assess the status of single datasets as well as entire production campaigns. This contribution will describe the pMp development, the evolution of its functionalities, and one and half year of operational experience.

Highlights

  • The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1] at CERN is 26.7 km long two-ring superconducting hadron accelerator and collider

  • Since the end of the LHC Run-I in 2012, Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) has produced over 20 billion simulated events, from 75 thousand processing requests organised in one hundred different campaigns

  • Its design and dependencies are shown in figure 1; it aggregates information from multiple services in the CMS computing infrastructure and visualizes data for user consumption. Production Monitoring Platform (pMp) uses its own database which is periodically updated from the input services, meaning that when a user loads information, his/her request does not interact with other services from CMS infrastructure

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Summary

Introduction

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1] at CERN is 26.7 km long two-ring superconducting hadron accelerator and collider. Physics analysis at the Compact Muon Solenoid requires both the production of simulated events and processing of the data collected by the experiment. Since the end of the LHC Run-I in 2012, CMS has produced over 20 billion simulated events, from 75 thousand processing requests organised in one hundred different campaigns.

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