Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre Incubator

Unlocking the power of Australia’s Tier 1 supercomputer

Through a national framework for trusted identity, accessing one of Australia’s Tier 1 supercomputers will become easier.

The Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre (Pawsey) is one of two Tier-1 high-performance computing facilities in Australia. Its primary function is to accelerate scientific research for the benefit of the nation. Pawsey’s service and expertise in supercomputing, data, cloud services and visualisation, enables research across a variety of fields including astronomy, life sciences, medicine, energy, resources and artificial intelligence. 

The Australian Access Federation (AAF) is collaborating with Pawsey, exploring options to provide seamless access to their services. Together we are developing a solution, that allows users to access Pawsey services with their organisational credentials. This will reduce security risks and enhance collaboration with other research infrastructures nationally and internationally. 

Nick Rossow, AAF’s eResearch Portfolio Manager says “The work we are doing with Pawsey is a foundational building block in the management of trusted identity access for all national research infrastructure and will play a critical role in the implementation of trust and identity across the sector. With them we are building a national Trust and Identity Framework. 

“It will enable Pawsey users situated within Australian and international universities, to access services – easily and securely – via their university credentials.  

“Furthermore, this incubator will enable Pawsey to use this Trust and Identity Framework, to integrate with the trust and identity solution for the Square Kilometre Array Observatory (SKAO). The SKAO is a next-generation radio-astronomy facility that will revolutionise the understanding of the universe. It is an international collaboration, with telescopes located in Australia and South Africa, with global headquarters in the United Kingdom. It requires many users, from a variety of locations to securely access the data it generates.”

A national framework for trusted identity 

The AAF is the national capability in trust and identity for the research and higher education sector, and we are developing a system-wide Trust and Identity Framework for Australia’s national research infrastructure.   

Through this initiative we are exploring the development of a connected research ecosystem for researchers, as well as industry, government, and the community. By implementing federated access, we are paving the way for innovation, collaboration, and commercialisation. Users will be able to log in once and seamlessly access resources for collaboration.  

The AAF manages the Australian Federation and is one of more than 80 federations globally. We enable access to more than 800 services nationally and internationally, including CERN, CSIRO and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). As a part of the Trust and Identity Pathfinder for national research infrastructures, we are adapting a globally recognised framework to facilitate best practice trust and identity for seamless access to the entire national research infrastructure ecosystem. 

Incubator shows the benefits of improved access through federated identity

In partnership with Pawsey, we are exploring the application of trust and identity for national research infrastructure, through a combination of technology and policy. This incubator allows us to test how researchers and other users connect to a supercomputing service.   

Nick Rossow further says “Within this incubator, we are exploring how we can utilise AAF credentials across Pawsey’s systems such as service allocation, application systems, command line access to high-performance computers, storage and web services.   

“We are also looking at external integrations with platforms such as Globus for data movement, and Nextflow Tower for computation job submission and management. Currently we are working towards a demonstration of a Trust and Identity Framework that Pawsey can showcase to its collaborators. 

“This incubator will improve access for users by integrating federated identity across Pawsey’s infrastructure, to improve automation, aid in the adoption of new tools to support users, improve oversight and strengthen identity management at Pawsey.” 

Meet our other incubators

National Imaging Facility

AAF has partnered with the National Imaging Facility (NIF) exploring improved access and collaboration for complex multi-site human imaging projects and medical trials using sensitive data.

NIF is Australia’s advanced imaging network, and provides open access to flagship imaging equipment, tools, data and analysis. NIF aims to maintain Australia’s world leading role in advanced imaging technology and make its capabilities accessible to all Australian medical researchers to solve challenges across research and industry. They enable research in areas such as mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), epilepsy and melanoma. NIF are critical to research translation, clinical trials and the commercialisation of medical products.

As one of AAF’s Trust and Identity Pathfinder Incubators, we have been working with NIF on enhancing their access — providing NIF partners, institutional researchers and external users with the opportunity for improved access and collaboration when undertaking complex, multi-site human imaging projects such as national clinical trials that use sensitive data.

Microscopy Australia

AAF has partnered with Microscopy Australia exploring impact tracking through persistent identifiers (PIDs).

Microscopy Australia are a consortium of university-based microscopy facilities that more than 3,500 researchers across Australia use each year. They aim to empower Australian science and innovation by making advanced microscopes accessible to all researchers.

One of the greatest challenges in research is to connect and report on distributed services and this incubator explores how richer reporting, impact tracking and usage data can be provided through ORCID iDs and PIDs across national research infrastructure.

ACCESS-NRI

AAF has partnered with ACCESS-NRI exploring options to provide consistent user tracking and reporting.

The Australian Earth-System Simulator (ACCESS-NRI)  is a national research Infrastructure that supports the research and development of the Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator (ACCESS) modelling system framework. ACCESS-NRI  provides this service in collaboration with National Computational Infrastructure (NCI).  

The AAF is currently in the discovery stage of an incubator with ACCESS-NRI, with the objective to develop a solution that can improve the current usage tracking approaches across all ACCESS-NRI resources.  

Contact the AAF

If you would like to discuss trust and identity for your organisation, please contact us and one of our project managers will be in contact.

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