Issue |
EPJ Web of Conf.
Volume 295, 2024
26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 2023)
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Article Number | 05012 | |
Number of page(s) | 8 | |
Section | Sustainable and Collaborative Software Engineering | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/202429505012 | |
Published online | 06 May 2024 |
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/202429505012
End-to-End Analysis Automation over Distributed Resources with Luigi Analysis Workflows
Institute of Experimental Physics, Hamburg University, Luruper Chaussee 149, 22761 Hamburg
* e-mail: marcel.rieger@cern.ch
Published online: 6 May 2024
In particle physics, workflow management systems are primarily used as tailored solutions in dedicated areas such as Monte Carlo production. However, physicists performing data analyses are usually required to steer their individual, complex workflows manually, frequently involving job submission in several stages and interaction with distributed storage systems by hand. This process is not only time-consuming and error-prone, but also leads to undocumented relations between particular workloads, rendering the steering of an analysis a serious challenge. This article presents the Luigi Analysis Workflow (Law) Python package which is based on the open-source pipelining tool Luigi, originally developed by Spotify. It establishes a generic design pattern for analyses of arbitrary scale and complexity, and shifts the focus from executing to defining the analysis logic. Law provides the building blocks to seamlessly integrate with interchangeable remote resources without, however, limiting itself to a specific choice of infrastructure. In particular, it introduces the concept of complete separation between analysis algorithms on the one hand, and run locations, storage locations, and software environments on the other hand. To cope with the sophisticated demands of end-to-end HEP analyses, Law supports job execution on WLCG infrastructure (ARC, gLite, CMS-CRAB) as well as on local computing clusters (HTCondor, Slurm, LSF), remote file access via various protocols using the Grid File Access Library (GFAL2), and an environment sandboxing mechanism with support for sub-shells and virtual environments, as well as Docker and Singularity containers. Moreover, the novel approach ultimately aims for analysis preservation out-of-the-box. Law is developed opensource and independent of any experiment or the language of executed code, and its user-base increased steadily over the past years.
© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2024
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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