Paper | Title | Page |
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MOAPL02 | The First Operation of the MAX IV Laboratory Synchrotron Facilities | 6 |
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On 21st of June 2016 the MAX IV Laboratory was inaugurated in the presence of the officials and has welcome the first external researchers to the new experimental stations. The MAX IV facility is the largest and most ambitious Swedish investment in research infrastructure and designed to be one of the brightest source of X-rays worldwide. The current achievements, progress, collaborations and vision of the facility will be described from the perspective of the control and IT systems. | ||
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Talk as video stream: https://youtu.be/8wGn2pcDuVM | |
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Slides MOAPL02 [91.373 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-MOAPL02 | |
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TUBPA04 | The MAX IV Laboratory Scientific Data Management | 206 |
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The Scientific Data Management is a key aspect of the IT system of a user research facility like the MAX~IV Laboratory. By definition, this system handles data produced by the experimental user of such a facility. It could be perceived as easy as using an external hard drive to store the experimental data to carry back to the home institute for analysis. But on the other hand the "data" can be seen as more than just a file in a directory and the "management" not only a copy operation. Simplicity and a good User Experience vs security/authentication and reliability are among the main challenges of this project along with all the mindset changes. This article will explain all the concepts and the basic roll-out of the system at the MAX~IV Laboratory for the first users and the features anticipated in the future. | ||
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Slides TUBPA04 [2.801 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-TUBPA04 | |
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TUMPL08 | MAX IV BioMAX Beamline Control System: From Commissioning Into User Operation | 318 |
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The BioMAX beamline at MAX IV is devoted to macromolecular crystallography and will achieve a high level of experimental automation when its full potential is reached due to the usage of high end instrumentation and comprehensive software environment. The control system is based on Tango and Sardana for managing the main elements of the beamline. Data acquisition and experiment control is done through MXCuBE v3, which interfaces with the control layer. Currently, the most critical elements such as the detector and diffractometer are already integrated into the control system, whereas the integration of the sample changer has already started. BioMAX has received its first users, who successfully collected diffraction data and provided feedback on the general performance of the control system and its usability. The present work describes the main features of the control system and its operation, as well as the next instrument integration plans | ||
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Slides TUMPL08 [1.209 MB] | |
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Poster TUMPL08 [6.023 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-TUMPL08 | |
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THPHA132 | Preliminary Scanning Integration at MAX IV Beamlines | 1688 |
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Funding: MAX IV Laboratory The MAX IV Laboratory is in a stage where beamlines are starting to welcome users that will collect data utilizing various scanning methods. This paper focuses on the different motion and synchronization techniques, hardware integration, software solutions, data acquisition and experiment supervision at MAX IV beamlines. |
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Poster THPHA132 [0.532 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-THPHA132 | |
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THPHA169 | Building S.C.A.D.A. Systems in Scientific Installations with Sardana and Taurus | 1820 |
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Sardana and Taurus form a python software suite for Supervision, Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) optimized for scientific installations. Sardana and Taurus are open source and deliver a substantial reduction in both time and cost associated to the design, development and support of control and data acquisition systems. The project was initially developed at ALBA and later evolved to an international collaboration driven by a community of users and developers from ALBA, DESY, MAXIV and Solaris as well as other institutes and private companies. The advantages of Sardana for its adoption by other institutes are: free and open source code, comprehensive workflow for enhancement proposals, a powerful environment for building and executing macros, optimized access to the hardware and a generic Graphical User Interface (Taurus) that can be customized for every application. Sardana and Taurus are currently based on the Tango Control System framework but also capable to inter-operate to some extend with other control systems like EPICS. The software suite scales from small laboratories to large scientific institutions, allowing users to use only some parts or employ it as a whole. | ||
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Poster THPHA169 [2.746 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-THPHA169 | |
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THPHA170 | Usage and Development of Web Services at MAX IV | 1826 |
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The web continues to grow as an application platform, with accessibility and platform independence as major benefits. It also makes it possible to tie services together in new ways through simple APIs. At MAX IV we are using web services for various purposes related to the control system, for example, monitoring servers and services, accessing alarm history, viewing control system status, managing system and users logs and running recurring jobs. Furthermore, all user management is also accessed via web applications, and even data analysis and experiment control can now be performed via web based interfaces. We make an effort to use existing tools whenever possible (e.g. Kibana, Prometheus), and otherwise develop systems in-house, based on current well established libraries and standards, such as JavaScript, Python, Apache, etc. This paper presents an overview of our activities in the field and describes different architectural decisions taken. | ||
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Poster THPHA170 [5.702 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2017-THPHA170 | |
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