Conditions and Support
Conditions
In order to be able to use the HPC facility, you need to be affiliated with University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht University, Hubrecht Institute or Princess Maxima Center for pediatric oncology. This means that you either need to be employed by one of these institutes or you need to have a "gastvrijheidsverklaring". The responsibility to ensure that this is the case is up to the principal investigator of the individual research groups locate in one of these institutes.
By using the HPC facility you also comply with the following policies:
- You are familiar with the guidelines of scientific conduct set forth by UMC Utrecht, Utrecht University, Hubrecht Institute or Princess Maxima Center.
- If applicable, you are familiar with and comply with the latest legislation concerning patient-related research.
- Patient-related research data are not allowed on the HPC infrastructure. However, if the data has been (pseudeo)anonymized beforehand, so that samples cannot be traced back to individual subjects, you can use this data on the HPC infrastructure.
- Abuse of HPC infrastructure resources may result in termination of the user account.
Support
Support for the HPC facility is provided on a "best effort" basis. This means that we will do our utmost best to keep the infrastructure running at all times, but that we cannot and will not guarantee 100% up time and do not have 24/7 support. Support requests are taken care of during normal working hours (weekdays, 9.00-17.00) and you can expect us to reply within a day. During weekends and evenings, we do typically monitor support requests and respond if possible, but this depends heavily on the availability and willingness of our support team to do this during their free time. No guarantees about response times will be given and/or can be claimed about support requests made during the weekend or evening. If not handled during this period, they will be taken care of the next working day.
Support requests should be directed to
hpc-systems@lists.umcutrecht.nl, only then can we guarantee that we are able to provide the support as indicated here.
To avoid confusion, we also want to be clear on what we support:
- Hardware support for compute nodes if a valid hardware support contract with the hardware supplier is in place.
- General Operating System maintenance (security updates, software fixes, monitoring and management).
- Configuration, optimization, maintenance and monitoring of the queueing engine and available resources.
- Configuration, optimization, maintenance and monitoring of the HPC storage system.
- Configuration, optimization, maintenance and monitoring of the HPC submit hosts and master hosts.
In addition, we try to assist/advise on the following topics, but cannot guarantee that we are able to provide a solution:
- Compilation, installation and configuration of group-specific software packages.
- Resolve simultaneous peak performance needs of different groups.
- Implementation, configuration and optimization of bioinformatics workflows/pipelines.
Your Privacy
The European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) (Dutch: Algemene
Verordening Gegevensbescherming) requires us to disclose the information that we
gather about you, what we use it for, and for how long we store this
information. Please note that under the GDPR, you have certain additional rights
(the right to see the information we have about you, the right to be forgotten,
etcetera). We invite you to read the GDPR, and if you want to exercise any of
these rights, please let us know (
hpc-systems@lists.umcutrecht.nl) and we'll
help you to the best of our abilities.
The HPC facility falls under the jurisdiction of the UMC Utrecht, so all the
terms and regulations that are listed in the UMC Utrecht privacy statement (URL not known yet, will be added later)
apply to us as well. Below, we will outline what we specifically, as HPC, gather
and store about you.
Some personal information
The HPC user database contains your name, your e-mail address, and in some cases
your telephone number. We need your e-mail address to be able to inform you
about current affairs (e.g., planned downtime). We use the telephone number to
be able to contact you for urgent incidents (e.g., anomalous use of the system,
suspected account abuse). We keep this data for as long as your account is
active, and a maximum of 6 months after that. After this period, your personal
data will be removed from the account. The account itself is kept, in a disabled
state, because not all your files are removed (see below), and they need an
owner.
Your files
The HPC is not a place to store "personal" files. We expect your files to
contain work-related material only.
File security is based on the standard Unix filesystem security, in which the
"owner", the "group" and "others" can have certain permissions
(read/write/execute). By default, these permissions will be set to a secure
state (see below). Note that the HPC administrators have the ability to
read/write/execute your files, but will not do so without your permission.
There are several places to store your HPC files.
- Your homedirectory, which by default is only readable by you. Other users cannot read this directory, unless you set more permissive permissions yourself. This directory will be removed 6 months after your HPC account is deactivated. It should contain things like login-scripts, personal configuration files, etc.
- Several group directories (/hpc/local, /hpc/shared, /hpc/groupname). By default, these locations are readable by the other members of your group, but are not accessible by people in other groups. Files and directories you create here should contain the majority of your research data. These files and directories will not be removed after your account has been disabled, as they may be relevant for other group members.
Login data
When you log in to our systems, we store the time that you log in and out, and
the IP address you came from. We keep this information for 6 months.
We need this information to monitor account usage, and to be able to detect
anomalous logins: "This person is suddenly logging in from several places around
the globe; perhaps the account is hacked".
Job data
For every HPC job you submit, some data is stored in our database. Most
information is purely technical (which node did it run on, what is the job
number, how much CPU and memory did it use), and some information could be
construed to be personally identifiable.
These are: your username, the group you submitted the job for, the submission
time, and the job name.
The data gathered about user jobs is basically the core register of the HPC
system. We need it to monitor, diagnose, and predict how our groups are using
our system, for billing and capacity planning. Therefore, we keep this data for
no less than 7 years.