Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Welcome Keynote
Event Date: March 6, 2017
Boot-time tracing is one of the latest Linux kernel tracing proposal, which allows us to trace kernel booting with full tracing features, like per-event filters and triggers, histograms, instances, dynamic-events etc. Along with the boot-time tracing the kernel command-line interface is also expanded by Extra Boot Config (XBC) so that user can specify complex boot-time settings with structured-key value configuration file.This talk will show you what the boot-time tracing and the extra boot config provide, the advantages and how you can use it for your boot-time features.
Each seismic survey in Oil & Gas exploration generates tons of seismic wave data, typically hundreds of Terabytes. Transforming the huge amount of data into a accurate earth subsurface model requires exascale level computing power. This presentation will analyze the computing requirements and trends in seismic data processing, evaluate the competence of the current generations ARM64 SoCs and the new features required.
Slack channel to chat with the speaker during the live broadcast: https://linaroconnect.slack.com/archives/C01B1SV18F5Currently, one big gap between Arm64 and X86 cloud platforms is that X86 can provide a much better instance migration experience than the Arm64 platform. CPU comparison and CPU model capabilities have provided Arm64 VM with the ability to live migration among different hardware vendors. This function is the essential function of the data center. From the cloud management framework, we also need to consider the realization of supporting VM live migration.In this session, we will talk about what we have done in the most widely used virtualization management tool - Libvirt to provide better live migration capabilities on Arm64 platform and also some details in the newest lightweight cloud management project such as Kubevirt.With live migration support on Arm64, it can finally benefit the cloud ecosystem for large scale datacenter scenarios which may use different Arm64 CPU architectures and vendors.
Over the last 20 years, Open Source software has made incredible inroads and become the de-facto standard for system software in many market categories. The same is not true of Open Source Quality Assurance. Despite the availability of many QA resources that are Open Source, the testing landscape is very fragmented, and there are lots of areas where in-house and ad-hoc testing hardware, code and methods are used.In this keynote, Tim will describe barriers to sharing existing tests and test infrastructure. Tim will give his insights about what will it take to get Quality Assurance to the same level of ubiquity, quality, community, ease of deployment, and low cost, as Open Source coding.
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LCG has had a lighting talks session for a few Connects now. We talk about portions of our work that dont necessarily fit into a full-sized session, but are interesting for members and attendees nevertheless.
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