DIRAC is an interware, meaning a software framework for distributed computing.
DIRAC provides a complete solution to one or more user community requiring access to distributed resources. DIRAC builds a layer between the users and the resources offering a common interface to a number of heterogeneous providers, integrating them in a seamless manner, providing interoperability, at the same time as an optimized, transparent and reliable usage of the resources.
DIRAC has been started by the LHCb collaboration who still maintains it. It is now used by several communities (AKA VO=Virtual Organizations) for their distributed computing workflows.
DIRAC is written in python 3.9.
Status rel-v8r0 series (stable, recommended):
Status integration branch (devel):
- Official source code repo: https://github.com/DIRACGrid/DIRAC
- HTML documentation (stable release): http://diracgrid.org (http://dirac.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html)
- Issue tracker: https://github.com/DIRACGrid/DIRAC/issues
- Discussions: https://github.com/DIRACGrid/DIRAC/discussions
- [ARCHIVED] Support Mailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/diracgrid-forum
There are basically 2 types of installations: client, and server.
For DIRAC client installation instructions, see the web page.
For DIRAC server installation instructions, see the web page.
DIRAC 8.0 drops support for Python 2 based clients and servers.
There are three available options for installation:
DIRACOS2: This is the only fully supported method, see the DIRACOS 2 documentation.
Conda / Mamba from conda-forge : We recommend making a new environment for DIRAC using
mamba create --name my-dirac-env -c conda-forge dirac-grid conda activate my-dirac-env
Pip: Provided suitable dependencies are available DIRAC can be installed with
pip install DIRAC
. Support for installing the dependencies should be sought from the upstream projects.
For the full development guide see here, some of the most important details are included below.
DIRAC is a fully open source project, and you are welcome to contribute to it. A list of its main authors can be found here A detailed explanation on how to contribute to DIRAC can be found in this page. For a quick'n dirty guide on how to contribute, simply:
Fork the project inside the GitHub UI
Clone locally and create a branch for each change
git clone git@github.com:$GITHUB_USERNAME/DIRAC.git cd DIRAC git remote add upstream git@github.com:DIRACGrid/DIRAC.git git fetch --all git checkout upstream/integration git checkout -b my-feature-branch git push -u origin my-feature-branch
Create a Pull Request, targeting the "integration" branch.
To ensure the code meets DIRAC's coding conventions we recommend installing pre-commit
system wide using your operating system's package manager.
Alteratively, pre-commit
is included in the Python 3 development environment, see the development guide for details on how to create one.
Once pre-commit
is installed you can enable it by running:
pre-commit install --allow-missing-config
Code formatting will now be automatically applied before each commit.
Unit tests are provided within the source code and can be ran using pytest
.
Integration, regression and system tests are instead in the DIRAC/tests/
directory.
This work is co-funded by the EOSC-hub project (Horizon 2020) under Grant number 777536