Tsunami, the IU-developed file transfer protocol, helps break previous records for high-speed data transfer
Data transferred at twice the previous known record for the same distance
BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Using a network file transfer protocol developed by researchers at Indiana University's
Advanced Network Management Lab (ANML), physicists at TRIUMF, Canada's national laboratory for particle and nuclear physics, were able to transfer 4.7 gigabits of data between their laboratories in Vancouver, British Columbia, and CERN, the European organization for nuclear research, in Geneva, Switzerland, in less than sixty seconds and at speeds reaching 769 megabits per second. This was the equivalent of transferring a full CD in less than eight seconds or a full length DVD movie in less than one minute.
This demonstration was in conjunction with iGrid 2002, the international conference on e-science and grid and virtual laboratory applications enabled by high-performance global networks, held last week in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. iGrid 2002 was sponsored, in part, by Indiana University.
The protocol, known as "Tsunami," is designed to transfer very large data
files over great distances. Tsunami has been optimized to perform
exceptionally well on high-speed research and education networks, such as
Internet 2 and CANARIE, Canada's Internet 2 counterpart, with less degradation in the rate of speed than other commonly used network file transfer protocols.
"Because of the this technology developed in the ANML, researchers across the globe are able to better realize the investment made in our international networking infrastructure, " said Steven S. Wallace, director and chief technologist in the ANML. "Tsunami is designed to fully utilize the capabilities of high performance global networks, tolerating levels of packet loss that disable other transfer protocols."
Tsunami was first used in May, 2002, when the partners launching the Global Terabit Research Network (GTRN) transferred the equivalent in data of nearly 1000 kilometers of shelved books (roughly twice the number of books in the US Library of Congress), between Seattle, Washington and Brussels, Belgium in the same time (17 hours, 40 minutes) it took to transmit the first transatlantic telegraph message in 1858. During the GTRN test, this same message was transmitted 10 billion times, which roughly translates to the equivalent of a full-length DVD being transmitted every minute.
Tsunami is licensed under Indiana University's Open Source Licensing Agreement. Those interested is obtaining a beta version of the Tsunami protocol, should refer to the Advanced Network Management Lab's website at:
http://anml.iu.edu
About Indiana University
Indiana University is one of the oldest state universities in the Midwest and also one of the largest universities in the United States, with more than 110,000 students, faculty, and staff on eight campuses. IU has a growing national and international reputation in the areas of information technology and advanced networking. IU was named by Time Magazine as 2001 College of the Year among research institutions. For more information, see: http://www.indiana.edu.
About TRIUMF
TRIUMF is a major Canadian facility devoted to fundamental research. It also has applied research programs in materials science, life sciences, and medical therapy. TRIUMF is managed as a joint venture by a consortium of four universities (Alberta, British Columbia, Victoria and Simon Fraser) with six associate members. Through TRIUMF, Canada has earned an international reputation in sub-atomic physics, a field devoted to understanding the mysteries of matter. For more information, see: http://www.triumf.ca/