Pegasus in the Sky with Data
Pegasus and Ewa Deelman were recently featured in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering magazine. We hope you enjoy the story of Pegasus’ creation and successes as much as we do.
Pegasus and Ewa Deelman were recently featured in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering magazine. We hope you enjoy the story of Pegasus’ creation and successes as much as we do.
We will be holding regular online Pegasus Office Hours starting Friday April 13th at 11AM Pacific.Initially, they will be held on a bi-monthly basis on second Friday of the month, and will address user questions and also apprise the community of new developments.We will have an overview presentation on how … Read More
Last week, Open Science Grid held its annual All Hands Meeting, this time hosted by University of Utah. It was a pleasure to meet Pegasus users and see their talks. A big thank you to those projects and presenters, for sharing their experiences and continued use of Pegasus. Here are … Read More
Pegasus team members will be giving an overview of how to use containers in Pegasus workflows, at the CyVerse Container Camp, March 7-9 at University of Arizona, Tucson. The Pegasus portion is currently scheduled for Friday, but the rest of the agenda is packed with related and interesting topics such … Read More
We will be holding regular online Pegasus Office Hours starting Friday February 9th at 11AM Pacific.Initially, they will be held on a bi-monthly basis on second Friday of the month, and will address user questions and also apprise the community of new developments.For our first series, we will be have … Read More
We are happy to announce the release of Pegasus 4.8.1 . Pegasus 4.8.1 is a minor bug fix release Improvements [PM-1233] – update pyopen ssl to 0.14 or higher Bugs Fixed [PM-1221] – source tar balls have .git files [PM-1222] – condor dagman does not allow . in job names … Read More
Are you going to attend the SC17 conference in Denver, Colorado on November 12-17, 2017? We will be giving a presentation “Software Integrity with Pegasus:Securing Scientific Workflow Data” about our work as part of the NSF SWIP project on Tuesday, Nov 14th at 2:00pm at the University of Southern California booth … Read More
A collaboration that began 16 years ago between computer scientists at the USC Information Sciences Institute (ISI) and members of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and Virgo projects is opening up a new window onto the nature of the universe. Pegasus, a specialized computer program developed by a … Read More
By Emily Gersema, USC News The Nobel Prize-winning discovery that gravitational waves exist in the universe, which in turn further confirmed Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, was made possible in part by a collaboration with USC computer scientists. By developing a specialized computer program called Pegasus, a team … Read More
The Pegasus team is pleased to announce that it has received a new grant from the National Science Foundation to support new development and maintenance of the Pegasus Workflow Management System. It will support Pegasus for the next 5 years and help address the needs of our diverse user community. … Read More