Open Grid Forum


The Open Grid Forum is a community of users, developers, and vendors for standardization of grid computing. It was formed in 2006 in a merger of the Global Grid Forum and the Enterprise Grid Alliance.
The OGF models its process on the Internet Engineering Task Force, and produces documents with many acronyms such as OGSA, OGSI, and JSDL.

Organization

The OGF has two principal functions plus an administrative function: being the standards organization for grid computing, and building communities within the overall grid community. Each of these function areas is then divided into groups of three types: working groups with a generally tightly defined role, research groups with a looser role bringing together people to discuss developments within their field and generate use cases and spawn working groups, and community groups.
Three meetings are organized per year, divided between North America, Europe and East Asia. Many working groups organize face-to-face meetings in the interim.

History

The concept of a forum to bring together developers, practitioners, and users of distributed computing was discussed at a "Birds of a Feather" session in November 1998 at the SC98 supercomputing conference.
Based on response to the idea during this BOF, Ian Foster and Bill Johnston convened the first Grid Forum meeting at NASA Ames Research Center in June 1999, drawing roughly 100 people, mostly from the US. A group of organizers nominated Charlie Catlett to serve as the initial chair, confirmed via a plenary vote was held at the 2nd Grid Forum meeting in Chicago in October 1999.
With advice and assistance from the Internet Engineering Task Force, OGF established a process based on the IETF. OGF is managed by a steering group.
During 1998, groups similar to Grid Forum began to organize in Europe and Japan. Discussions among leaders of these groups resulted in combining to form the Global Grid Forum which met for the first time in Amsterdam in March 2001. GGF-1 in Amsterdam followed five Grid Forum meetings. Catlett served as GGF Chair for two 3-year terms and was succeeded by Mark Linesch in September 2004.
The Enterprise Grid Alliance, formed in 2004, was more focused on large data center businesses such as EMC Corporation, NetApp, and Oracle Corporation.
At GGF-18 in September 2006, GGF became Open Grid Forum based on a merger with EGA.
In September 2007, Craig Lee of the Aerospace Corporation became chair.

Technologies

Some technologies specified by OGF include:
In addition to technical standards, the OGF published community-developed informational and experimental documents.
The first version of the DRMAA API was implemented in Sun's Grid engine and also in the University of Wisconsin-Madison's program Condor cycle scavenger. The separate Globus Alliance maintains an implementation of some of these standards through the Globus Toolkit. A release of UNICORE is based on the OGSA architecture and JSDL.