Globus Online goes European

Globus Online, the software-as-a-service for research data management, has launched a new web site – www.globuseurope.eu – to serve the European research community. The announcement was made at the GlobusEUROPE conference, co-located at the European Grid Infrastructure’s (EGI) Technical Forum 2012 in Prague, Czech Republic. The service is now online from Thursday September 20th, 2012.

European scientists can now use the Globus Online service to move large-scale data reliably, using a service specifically designed for them. This is the latest step in a multi-year effort led by the IGE to enable researchers within the EU to make use of the tools provided by Globus alongside the European Grid Infrastructure’s (EGI) services. “I’m delighted that IGE have chosen to launch this new service during our Technical Forum” says Steven Newhouse, EGI Director. “Our partnership with IGE and Globus Online is important for the future of the infrastructure and helps us support a wider range of researchers.”

Globus Online is a popular, fast, secure and easy-to-use file transfer service that was recently recognised by R&D Magazine as one of the 100 most technologically significant products introduced in the past year. Globus Online currently has over 6,000 registered users who have used the service to transfer over 500 million files, close to 7 petabytes, to date. Globusonline.eu is a pan-Atlantic project with the Globus team at the Computation Institute – a joint initiative between the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory – leading the development effort, and collaborating with both EGI and IGE to better address the specific requirements of researchers in the EU.

Globus Online moves data directly between source and destination systems without the need for the data to pass through an intermediate server. Servers in the U.S. monitor the transfers, automatically recover from common network and server failures and optimize the endpoints so that transfers are completed as quickly and efficiently as possible. Another benefit of this approach is that the transfer is secure, since Globus Online acts only as a control mechanism and does not view the content of the files being transferred.

“European data stays in Europe, just as U.S. data stays in the U.S.”, says Dr. Helmut Heller, project director of IGE. “We do make it clear that we store some basic information about these transfers on our servers in the U.S., but ask for the researchers' consent first,” adds Steve Tuecke, co-Principal Investigator for Globus Online. “Our goal is to work more closely with the European community in order to understand their needs and demonstrate the value a hosted service delivers to their research workflows.”

Globus Online evolved from the Globus Toolkit, an open-source suite of applications for building computing grids. The Globus Toolkit is widely used around the world and IGE is working to increase its use in Europe and to improve interoperability with other supercomputing software used by sites in EGI. “We are proud to provide this new service which further expands the support we already offer the European research community,” says Steve Tuecke. “With the ongoing support of IGE and EGI, we plan to use the file transfer service as a foundation to deliver additional data management capabilities, currently under development, to EU researchers.”