Jun 9 – 12, 2026
Fluno Center on the University of Wisconsin-Madison Campus
America/Chicago timezone

Session

Throughput Computing at Work: Reports from the Field

Jun 10, 2026, 11:00 AM
Howard Auditorium (Fluno Center on the University of Wisconsin-Madison Campus)

Howard Auditorium

Fluno Center on the University of Wisconsin-Madison Campus

601 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53715-1035

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. David Schultz (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
    6/10/26, 11:00 AM

    If the built-in HTCondor OAuth2 doesn't meet your needs, you can always choose to do your own thing. In this talk, we show how and why IceCube wrote a custom token storer and CredMon to handle OAuth2 token creation and refresh. While custom code allows exactly matching the IceCube workflow, the main defining feature is not having to ask command line users to do an additional web login. Along...

    Go to contribution page
  2. Greg Daues (NCSA)
    6/10/26, 11:25 AM

    Rubin Observatory will begin conducting the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), a 10 year survey of the Southern sky. This presentation will briefly cover how the project successfully uses HTCondor based workflows for several flavors of processing, including preparations for the project's Data Release Production at the United States Data Facility.
    The project's middleware that interfaces...

    Go to contribution page
  3. Seung-Jin Sul (Staff Software Engineer, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Joint Genome Institute (JGI), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
    6/10/26, 11:50 AM

    Authors

    Seung-Jin Sul*, Mario Melara, Ramani Kothadia, Ludovico Bianchi, Joshua Boverhof, Nick Tyler, Daniela Cassol, Mike Sneddon, Setareh Sarrafan, Kjiersten Fagnan
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA

    Abstract

    Scientific workflows at the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI) increasingly need to run across multiple high-performance computing facilities, but...

    Go to contribution page
  4. Marco Mascheroni (UCSD)
    6/10/26, 12:10 PM

    The CMS Submission Infrastructure (SI), based on HTCondor and GlideinWMS, operates a federated pool of resources, integrated from WLCG, HPC and cloud providers, supporting CMS offline computing needs. As CMS prepares for the High-Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) phase, the infrastructure must continue evolving to support increasing resource scale and heterogeinity, while maintaining the stability,...

    Go to contribution page
Building timetable...