Geneva, 20
January 2006. The kick-off meeting for a
new project called ETICS
(eInfrastructure for Testing,
Integration and Configuration of
Software) is being held at CERN
today. The goal of this project, which
is coordinated by CERN and funded
partially by the European Commission, is
to improve the quality of Grid and
distributed software by offering a
practical quality assurance process to
software projects, based on a build and
test service. This is a first of its
kind in Grid computing.
In the short
term, the ETICS project will offer a
build and test service via a secure web
interface and command line tools. In
the medium term, distributed testing
will be added, as well as a secure
repository of components built by the
ETICS service on a variety of platforms,
with well known and controlled external
dependencies. The longer term goal of
ETICS is to propose a certification
process for Grid and distributed
software (for example middleware,
components, services and user level
applications). The goal of this
certification process is to promote
practical quality assurance for Grid and
distributed software, and to provide a
quantitative measure of the quality
level of software.
The quality
assurance process offered by ETICS will
help users developing the next
generation of Grid software. In
particular, ETICS will help projects
developing a clear set of well behaved
and high quality software components,
services, plug-ins and applications.
Once the certification process is in
place, ETICS aims to ensure that it
becomes a globally recognised statement
of quality for Grid and distributed
software. This process should also
contribute to improving interoperability
between Grid and distributed software
stacks.
The ETICS
Service will build on cutting edge
technologies, such as the NMI and Condor
Grid middleware, the gLite build system
(Grid middleware from EGEE, the European
Grid flagship project led by CERN, which
is supporting the world’s largest
multi-science Grid infrastructure), as
well as gLite services and components.
The ETICS
consortium consists of CERN
(coordinator), INFN, Engineering
Ingegneria Informatica S.p.A, 4D Soft
Ltd. and the University of Wisconsin/Madison.
All partners are involved in European
and international e-Infrastructure
research projects, such as EGEE,
DILIGENT, SEE-GRID, etc. CERN is leading
worldwide efforts to deploy a Grid to
cope with the huge amounts of data, some
15 million Gigabytes annually, which
will be generated by CERN’s Large Hadron
Collider project, scheduled to start
operation in 2007. The two year ETICS
project has received €1.4 million
funding from the EC’s Information
Society and Media Directorate, under the
6th Framework Programme.
Note to
Editors:
1. For
more information about the ETICS
project, visit:
http://etics-eu-etics.org,
or contact etics-news@cern.ch;
2.
For more
information about CERN, visit: http://www.cern.ch;
3. For
more information about INFN, visit:
http://www.infn.it;
4. For
more information about
Engineering S.p.A,
visit: http://www.eng.it;
5. For
more information about
4D Soft Ltd ,
visit: http://www.4dsoft.hu;
6. For
more information about
University of Wisconsin,
visit: http://www.wisc.edu;
7. For
more information about the Enabling
Grids for E-sciencE project (EGEE),
visit: http://public.eu-egee.org. ETICS
is an ‘EGEE Related Project’;
8. For
more information about gLite, visit:
http://www.glite.org;
9. For
more information about the NMI project,
visit: http://www.nsf-middleware.org
10. For
more information about the Condor
project, visit: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/condor
11. For
more information about the DILIGENT
project, visit: http://www.diligentproject.org
12. For
more information about the SEE-GRID
project, visit: http://www.see-grid.org