
Cybershuttle

Cybershuttle, is a user-facing cyber-infrastructure that provides seamless access to a range of resources for researchers, enhancing their productivity. The Cybershuttle research environment is built on open source Apache Airavata software and uses a hybrid approach that integrates locally deployed agent programs with centrally hosted middle-ware. This enables end-to-end integration of computational science and engineering research across a range of resources, including users’ local resources, centralized university computing and data resources, computational clouds, and NSF-funded national-scale computing centers. To ensure ease of use, we have designed the platform with the best user-centered design practices in mind.
Cybershuttle Publication
Marru, Suresh, Marlon Pierce, Beth Plale, Sudhakar Pamidighantam, Dimuthu Wannipurage, Marcus Christie, Isuru Ranawaka et al. “Cybershuttle: An end-to-end cyberinfrastructure continuum to accelerate discovery in science and engineering.” In Practice and Experience in Advanced Research Computing 2023: Computing for the Common Good, pp. 26-34. 2023.

Custos

Custos is an open source, transparent, and reviewed code base for common security operations; and to operate trustworthy security services for the science gateway community using this software base. Custos will enable Science Gateways to seamlessly integrate with CILogon thus enabling federated authentication with more than 3,000 identity providers. Custos provides secured storage engine capabilities by integrating with Vault. Supports user and resource credential manamgenent including SSH keys. Custos enables Collaborations through implementation of hierarchical groups and sharing of digital artifacts between entities. Custos provides access to user level analytics and audit logs through an administrative portal interface.
CUSTOS Publication
Ranawaka, Isuru, Suresh Marru, Juleen Graham, Aarushi Bisht, Jim Basney, Terry Fleury, Jeff Gaynor et al. “Custos: Security middleware for science gateways.” In Practice and Experience in Advanced Research Computing 2020: Catch the Wave, pp. 278-284. 2020.

Science Gateways Platform

The Science Gateways Platform (SciGaP) as a service (SciGaP.org) provides a rapid development and stable hosting platform for a wide range of science gateways that focus on software as a service. Based on the open source Apache Airavata project, SciGaP services include user management, workflow execution management, computational experiment archiving and access, and sharing services that allow users to share results and other digital artifacts. SciGaP services are multi-tenanted, with clients accessing services through a well-defined, programming language-independent API. SciGaP services can be integrated into web, mobile, and desktop clients. To simplify development for new clients, SciGaP includes the PGA, a generic PHP-based gateway client for SciGaP services that also acts as a reference implementation of the API. Several example gateways using these services are summarized.
SciGaP Publication
Pierce, Marlon, Suresh Marru, Eroma Abeysinghe, Sudhakar Pamidighantam, Marcus Christie, and Dimuthu Wannipurage. “SciGaP: Apache Airavata Hosted Science Gateways.” (2013).

SMILES

SMILES are “small molecule, ionic isolation lattices” that display programmable super-bright emission. SMILES materials are made of fluorescent dyes (blue) packed together in high densities that solve a long-standing problem called self-quenching. The quenching comes from a collection of phenomena that emerge when dyes pack closely together and lose their ability to emit light . SMILES solves the problem of self-quenching by isolating the dyes from each other in a high-density checker-board lattice.

AMOS

The Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Sciences Gateway (AMOSGateway) enables novice and experienced users to utilize state-of-the-art software suites for tackling problems central to atomic, molecular, and optical science. This international collaboration provides a free platform and coordinated approach for computational research, allowing the community to produce new scientific results on an unprecedented scale.
AMOS Publication
Hamilton, Kathryn R., Klaus Bartschat, Nicolas Douguet, Sudhakar V. Pamidighantam, and Barry I. Schneider. “Simulation for All: The Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Science Gateway.” Computing in Science & Engineering 25, no. 3 (2023): 68-72.