SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 5, 2012 ? A new consortium to be formed by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and members of the Max Planck Society, Germany?s most successful research organization, will work to develop a popular open source data management solution called the integrated Rule-Oriented Data System (iRODS) into a sustained, production-quality technology for data management, sharing and integration.
Plans to establish the Enterprise iRODS (E-iRODS) Consortium will be introduced at SC12, the annual international conference of high performance computing, networking, storage and analysis. Demonstrations and information will be available in the RENCI/North Carolina booth on the SC exhibit floor (3640) and at an event Wednesday evening, Nov. 14, at the Salt Lake Marriott Downtown at City Creek. That event will feature representatives of RENCI, the Max Planck Society, the Data Intensive Cyber Environments (DICE) group at UNC Chapel Hill, and iRODS users such as NASA, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and Distributed Bio.
iRODS, developed by the DICE groups at UNC Chapel Hill and the University of California, San Diego, provides researchers in academia and government labs with distributed, policy-based data management technologies. In 2011, RENCI (UNC?s Renaissance Computing Institute) began working with the DICE group to develop E-iRODS, a branch of the iRODS software that is easier to use, simpler to integrate into commercial enterprises, backed up by extensive testing, and provides the support, security, and ongoing bug fixes usually associated with commercial software.
Through the planned E-iRODS Consortium, UNC Chapel Hill and its partners at the Max Planck Society seek to bring together universities, research organizations, businesses, and government agencies to guide the continued development of E-iRODS, obtain funding to support that development, and broaden the iRODS/E-iRODS user community. The consortium?s vision is to build E-iRODS into an open source data management system with the robustness, stability, documentation and development cycle of commercial software?a critical need for researchers and businesses as data sets grow larger and data sharing and access become more challenging.
The E-iRODS Consortium will be managed by an executive director and chief technologist based at RENCI. Software development and documentation teams at RENCI and the Max Planck Society will produce well-tested, production-quality software for deploying iRODS data management systems, supporting applications that depend on iRODS technologies, and for extending iRODS technologies.
?This consortium has the potential to benefit all iRODS users by creating a framework that supports the kind of development, testing and support usually associated with commercial software,? said Reagan Moore, head of the DICE team that developed iRODS, domain scientist for data management at RENCI, and a professor in UNC Chapel Hill?s School of Information and Library Science. ?When it is up and running, we look forward to working with the consortium to expand and enhance our software and to build a broader iRODS user community.?
E-iRODS Consortium at SC12
Participants in SC12 interested in learning more about the E-iRODS Consortium are encouraged to attend the presentation ?Enterprise iRODS and the E-iRODS Consortium,? in the RENCI/North Carolina booth (3640) at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13, or 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, or to stop by the booth any time during the week to discuss E-iRODS and the E-iRODS Consortium.
Additionally, an informational reception about iRODS and E-iRODS will be held from 5 p.m. ? 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, in the Solitude Room at the Salt Lake Marriott Downtown at City Creek, 75 S. West Temple, across the street from the Salt Palace Convention Center. Veteran iRODS users will talk about their data challenges and how iRODS helps them and representatives of the DICE group, RENCI, and the Max Planck Society will be on hand to talk about iRODS, E-iRODS and membership in the E-iRODS Consortium. Hot and cold hors d?oeuvres and a cash bar will be available.
?SC12 will be our first chance to talk to research communities about their data challenges and how they could benefit from being involved in the E-iRODS Consortium,? said Charles Schmitt, director of data initiatives at RENCI. ?We invite any group looking for data solutions?whether they are current iRODS users or not?to attend this reception.?
For a full schedule of events in the RENCI booth, see the RENCI@SC12 booth schedule (RENCI SC12 Booth Schedule PDF)
More information:
E-iRODS website
RENCI website
Max Planck Society website
iRODS wiki
Media Contact: Karen Green, 919-619-8213, kgreen@renci.org
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