CERN Accelerating science

Article
Title Commissioning of the ALICE readout software for LHC Run 3
Author(s) Chapeland, Sylvain (CERN)
Collaboration ALICE Collaboration
Publication 2024
Number of pages 8
In: EPJ Web Conf. 295 (2024) 02007
In: 26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy & Nuclear Physics, Norfolk, Virginia, Us, 8 - 12 May 2023, pp.02007
DOI 10.1051/epjconf/202429502007
Subject category Computing and Computers ; Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Accelerator/Facility, Experiment CERN LHC ; ALICE
Abstract ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is a heavy-ion detector studying the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quarkgluon plasma at the CERN LHC (Large Hadron Collider). During the second long shut-down of the LHC, the ALICE detector was upgraded to cope with an interaction rate of 50 kHz in Pb-Pb collisions, producing in the online computing system (O2) a sustained input throughput of 3.5 TB/s.In the past years, the O2/FLP project built the new data-acquisition system capable of handling this load. It consists of 200 readout nodes, collecting the data transferred from over 8000 detector links to PCs memory by dedicated PCI boards. The readout software manages the hardware and software memory buffers used for DMA and inter-process communication. It initiates the data flow, performs on-the-fly consistency checks, formats the data, reports performance, and finally pushes the data to the local processing pipeline. The output is then sent by the data distribution software over 100Gb/s links to a dedicated event processing farm.The readout software modular design allowed to address the manifold needs faced during the prototyping, installation and commissioning phases, which proved essential from the lab tests to physics production, like file replay and recording, or online multi-threaded LZ4 compression.We will describe the hardware and software implementation of the O2 readout system, and review the challenges met during the commissioning and first months of operation with LHC collisions in 2022.
Copyright/License publication: © 2024 The authors
CC-BY-4.0

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