[Yt-dev] A Mission Statement for yt

Matthew Turk matthewturk at gmail.com
Mon Jun 13 22:02:21 PDT 2011


Hi all,

tl;dr summary: New bullet points below, along with a first draft at a
proper prose solidification.  More comments still requested.

Thanks everyone for your thoughtful responses.  Having this discussion
as a group is really the only way to have the outcome of it be
meaningful; I'm glad we could have as much of a discussion as we
already have, and I hope that moving forward we can keep talking about
this and refining it to sort of steer ourselves.

In reading over your replies, it's become clear that the mission goal
bullet points in that original list were a bit ... well, shall we say,
under-ambitious?  So let's take the gloves off a bit.  Chris, your
comments in particular made me realize that my own feelings about this
project we've got going are a bit more ambitious; Brian, Britton and
Jeff, yours did as well.  And this didn't come through in the bullet
points, although it was alluded to.  I'll put my comments at the
bottom, along with an updated list of bullet points, after I respond
to a couple things that were brought up.

On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 5:06 PM, j s oishi <jsoishi at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> This is already a great discussion, and it seems to me that there are
> a lot of great ideas that I only want to echo. First, I think what
> Matt started with is a great foundation: yt should continue to be a
> collaborative, open-source tool for reproducible physical analysis of
> simulation data. I think the idea that not only is yt itself open
> source, but the *entire software stack upon which it rests* is also
> open source is a point worth emphasizing. If nothing else, a user gets
> not only yt but also an amazing toolkit for doing numerical
> computation free of cost and restrictive licenses.

That is a very, very good point -- and the impetus for its initial
creation, actually.

>
> Second, I think that Brian's point about data provenance and
> reproducibility of an entire project is really a direction I would
> love to see yt move in. yt should allow (and encourage!)
> reproducibility beyond analysis to include simulation initialization,
> runtime, and final, reduced data products. Furthermore, I believe it
> should be able to do this in a cross-code manner: imagine having a set
> of descriptions (perhaps in the form of yt scripts, perhaps in some
> other machine/human readable format) that describe initial conditions,
> runtime parameters, analysis outputs and data products that could be
> run on Enzo and Ramses. We could move beyond code comparison test
> problems to real inter-code reproducibility.

Yes.  Yes, and more yes; I firmly believe in this.  Looking,
realistically, at where we are and where we are going, I believe this
is an utterly feasible goal, and the timescale is not terribly great
-- effort simply needs to be applied in that direction.

We can have a longer discussion about this, but I think having this
item in the mission statement for now is sufficient.

>
> Finally, I think that Britton is right that we should also continue to
> emphasize that yt is a tool for physical reasoning on simulation data,
> and that *it*, not *you the user* make all necessary manipulations to
> get simulation data to physical quantities.
>
> Thanks again for starting such an interesting discussion. I look
> forward to moving forward with yt.
>
> j
>
> On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 4:23 PM, Brian O'Shea <bwoshea at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi Matt,
> >
> > This may not be something specifically for the mission statement (depending
> > on how wordy we want to get), but I'm very interested in using yt (or
> > something that encompasses yt) as a workflow tool so that my simulations are
> > completely reproducible.  What I could imagine is something like this:

I very much like the workflow you laid out, although I would contend
we should address more directly the task of running the simulation.
On some level, it becomes a realizable goal to execute the main loop
of the code in Python without any real overhead.  This will have the
side effect of providing much easier access to the data during the
course of the simulation.

I would also scratch out "Enzo" and replace it with "Simulation Code"
-- while pragmatically I recognize your simulations will likely be
conducted in Enzo for the purposes of this provenance tracking, I feel
it should be said that for the mission statement I believe in a
code-neutral direction.

One difficulty here is the idea of actually moving the data.  It is
not clear the me that moving data around in file systems is a
tractable, solvable problem.  That is a good thing to strive for, but
I personally can't wrap my head around it.  Stephen?  Britton?

> >
> > 1.  Generate initial conditions, cosmological or otherwise.  IC parameter
> > file goes into a database, along with details about the code that's used to
> > generate my ICs (inits/MUSIC/grafic hash, outputs of make show-config and
> > make show-flags, etc.)
> >
> > 2.  Run simulation.  Run-related and performance information is collected in
> > a database.  (what supercomputer?  How many CPUs?  Environmental variables?
> > Which version of MPI?  What date(s) did the job run on?  What nodes?  Copy
> > of Enzo restart parameter files and perhaps hierarchy files, for later
> > query?)
> >
> > 3.  Back up Enzo data to mass storage (or perhaps some subset of the data,
> > depending on how big the sim is).  What directory is it in?  Should it be
> > world-readable, group-readable, etc.?
> >
> > 4.  Do analysis.  Record all details of analysis and plot making, so that I
> > can go back and retrace all details.
> >
> > At that point, I would know _precisely_ how and with what
> > commands/code/parameter files/etc. the plots that are in my papers, and
> > everything leading up to that, is generated.  This helps when you go back to
> > deal with the referee ("how DID I make that stupid plot?  What was sigma8
> > again?"), but also for reproducibility, since in principle somebody could
> > just go back, look at the database, and be able to do precisely what I did.
> > Also, if somebody wanted to use archival data - something we hope to do more
> > of in the future, as simulations grow in expense and complexity - there'd be
> > no confusion about the provenance of that data.
> >
> > If I had to sum this up in a sentence, it'd be "Transform yt into a tool for
> > easily and transparently tracking all aspects of simulation generation,
> > execution, and analysis for the purposes of reproducibility."

That's a great sentence.

Britton: I like your additions very much.  It had completely slipped
my mind that one of the most useful features of yt is its physical and
geometric object selection.

Chris: I don't think you are stepping outside the scope of what we
could generously call "The yt project" with what you mention.  There
are the technical goals, and the broader community goals.  The goals
of open science, reproducibility, and cultivating a community of
scientists willing to share scripts, analysis routines, and even
analysis modules are certainly part of what I think we are all
striving for.  And this goal isn't composed of just deploying
infrastructure, rolling it out, but also providing a welcoming and
friendly community of people willing to help.  For instance, it's
great that scripts written to generate phase plots from Orion outputs
can be used nearly unmodified on Enzo outputs.  (I remember when Jeff
worked so hard to make this so --
http://www.flickr.com/photos/matthewturk/2598141965/ )  But even more
than that, I think it's amazing that people are willing to share these
scripts.

So yes, let's bake that right into the mission statement.

As for your comments about the microphysical solvers, believe me when
I say they are not falling on deaf ears.  Moving toward an open
source, community-driven model for microphysical solvers is an issue
near and dear to my own heart, having spent several years of my life
writing a primordial chemistry solver.  I believe there is a place for
interfacing with that sort of project and endeavor inside yt -- in
particular, interfacing with specific APIs and so forth to seamlessly
calculate cooling times or EOS or opacities.  Let's revisit this issue
in the future.

(Although, if we step back for a second and look at what's in yt ...
boundary condition calculations, cooling time calculations, gravity,
... the mind does wander.)

The revised bullet points I have:

= What is the mission? =
 * To create a fun, community-led, open source tool for asking and
answering astrophysical questions through simulations, analysis and
visualization that allows one to ask astrophysical questions of
simulation data independent of the code used to produce that data.
 * To create a friendly, helpful community of scientists
 * To further the goals of Open Science
 * To construct an environment that encompasses the generation of
data, starting from initial conditions, through simulations, and
finally resulting in publication-quality plots
 * To create reproducible, cross-code questions and answers from
astrophysical data
 * To present simulation data in physical terms, rather than strictly
in simulation and data format terms
 * To construct a consistent language for asking questions of
simulation data from many sources
 * To encourage researchers to participate in constructing a community code
 * To provide a place to create and share analysis codes, recipes, and
other things that can be helpful to others seeking to answer similar
scientific questions.

The next step in this is to try to distill it down into a sentence or
two.  I've included my first pass at this.  Not all items have to be
included -- they can be shuffled off and left implicit in the proper
mission statement, but can show up in the broader directions.  The
ultimate goal of this is to provide both the short-form "elevator
pitch" and then augment that with what we could generously call
strategy documents.

Draft 1:

The yt project aims to produce an integrated science environment for
asking and answering astrophysical questions, encompassing the
creation of initial conditions, the execution of simulations and the
detailed exploration and visualization of the resultant data.
Development of yt is driven by a commitment to Open Science principles
as manifested in participatory development, reproducibility, a
friendly and helpful community of users and developers, and Free and
Libre Open Source Software.

I'm not terribly satisfied with this draft.  I don't quite know how to
work in two things that I think should be stated -- that the end goal
is, ideally, a community project (whose bus factor is equal to the
number of users :) and that we want to focus on the physical
underpinnings of simulations when asking questions rather than, say,
the specifics of unformatted fortran or HDF5.  I think that the
broader focus (as an integrated science environment) comes across, but
the other core aspects are a bit underserved.

Edits and suggestions?

Thanks again, everyone.  I'm glad we're having this conversation.

-Matt

> >
> > Anyway, maybe that's unrealistic, but it'd be awesome.  The few workflow
> > tools that I have been exposed to suffer from excessive generality, and thus
> > are a bit too cumbersome to be easy to use, and thus too cumbersome to be
> > actually used.
> >
> > --Brian
> >
> > On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 12:43 PM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk at gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi everyone,
> >>
> >> I hope you'll take the opportunity to read and respond to this email,
> >> even if you're not a heavy-developer, or even a heavy-user, of yt.
> >> Your feedback and contributions would be greatly, greatly appreciated,
> >> particularly as this will help guide where yt development,
> >> community-building and (optimistically) use will go.  I know that
> >> sometimes the signal-to-noise on the yt lists can be a bit low, but I
> >> think this is a particularly useful discussion to have.
> >>
> >> A few of us have been brainstorming, in person, in IRC, etc about the
> >> direction yt has been going.  There are a number of reasons for doing
> >> this -- to provide focus, to provide an idea of the
> >> off-in-the-distance goal, and to have a public statement of what we're
> >> about, which shows ambition, concern for the values that go into a
> >> scientific code, and an interest in providing access to that code.
> >> This boils down to coming up with a mission statement, which will help
> >> both focus our goals on what we want to provide, as well as describe
> >> those areas we do not want to provide.  Much of this is based on the
> >> contents of “The Art of Community” by Jono Bacon, specifically around
> >> page 71 in the PDF available on www.artofcommunityonline.org/get/ .
> >>
> >> “Mission statements are intended to be consistent and should rarely
> >> change, even if the tasks that achieve that mission change regularly.
> >> When building your mission statement, always have its longevity in
> >> mind. Remember, your mission statement is your slam-dunking, audacious
> >> goal. For many communities these missions can take decades or even
> >> longer to achieve. Their  purpose is to not only describe the finish
> >> line, but to help the community stay on track.”
> >>
> >> To develop a mission statement, which will act as a precursor to a
> >> strategic plan, we need to construct answers to three questions.
> >> These will provide the initial basis for a broader mission statement.
> >> For reference, here are some “principles” we came up with several
> >> years ago:
> >>
> >> http://yt.enzotools.org/principles.html
> >>
> >> As I mentioned above, a few of us have been spitballing answers to
> >> these questions, and it has reached the point where we really need to
> >> bring this forward, to conduct these discussions in public, to bring
> >> some clarity and engagement to the process.  Ultimately, once we have
> >> sketched out a couple broad goals and bullet points, this can then be
> >> distilled into a short, pithy block of text that serves as a "Mission
> >> Statement."  Below are some potential bullet points, but I feel
> >> strongly that it's important that these get refined and discussed.
> >>
> >> = What is the mission? =
> >>  * To create a fun, community-led, open source tool for asking and
> >> answering astrophysical questions through simulations, analysis and
> >> visualization
> >>  * To create reproducible, cross-code questions and answers from
> >> astrophysical data
> >>  * To construct a consistent language for asking questions of
> >> simulation data from many sources
> >>  * To encourage researchers to participate in constructing a community
> >> code
> >>
> >> = What are the opportunities and areas of collaboration? =
> >>  * Development of new tools, new techniques, and adding support for new
> >> codes.
> >>  * Adding components to the GUI
> >>  * Providing outreach-capable frontends
> >>  * Improving visualization qualities
> >>  * Adding new methods of accessing data
> >>  * Performance analysis & optimization
> >>  * Deployment to new platforms
> >>  * Designing new web pages
> >>  * Writing documentation and recipes
> >>  * Spreading the word
> >>  * Support for Cartesian non-astrophysical simulations (weather,
> >> earthquakes)
> >>  * Extension to non-Cartesian coordinate systems
> >>  * Mentoring new developers
> >>
> >> = What are the skills required? =
> >>  * Thoughtful process
> >>  * Careful quality control
> >>  * Ability to communicate
> >>  * An investment in “the answer”
> >>  * Eagerness to participate in an open fashion
> >>
> >> What other bullets, ideas, inclinations do people have?  If we can
> >> start a discussion, maybe we can draft some text.  This would
> >> certainly help with focusing our strategies for presenting yt to
> >> others, directing our development in conjunction with our scientific
> >> goals, and collaborating as a community.
> >>
> >> Thanks very much for any thoughts,
> >>
> >> Matt
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> >
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