Project

General

Profile

Actions

D101 Visual workflow editor » History » Revision 2

« Previous | Revision 2/5 (diff) | Next »
Paolo Manghi, 27/02/2015 12:25 PM


D101 Visual workflow editor

Task leader: ICM. Participants: ICM, CNR, ARC.

  • Aim: Make Information Inference Service (IIS) more flexible.
  • Description:
    • Implement tools for enhanced resource management within IIS.
    • Implement “training workflows” to automate calibration of machine learning algorithms in order to accommodate to Information Space data changing in time.
    • Implement IIS-internal “visual workflow editor” for an easier way to manage data flow between modules (i.e., functionalities) of IIS.
    • Implement tools to provide an easier feedback from OpenAIRE portal on modules of IIS.

Task Timeline (Including Deliverables & Milestones)

  • Aug 2015 (deliverable D10.1): “Visual workflow editor”: report on design, implementation, rationale, and main functionalities of the solution.
  • Dec 2015 (milestone M10.1): “Visual workflow editor”: production version of the solution integrated with IIS.
  • Aug 2017 (deliverable D10.4): “Training workflows”: report on architecture and implementation
  • Dec 2017 (milestone M10.4): “Training workflows”: production version of the solution integrated with the rest of the system.

Areas of priority (where to concentrate first)

  • Finish activities (integrations etc.) that were started in OpenAIRE+.
  • Migrate code to GitHub.
  • Deliver deliverables explicitly required by DOW (“visual workflow editor”, “training workflows”).
  • Improve flexibility and ease of use of IIS.

Forseen Integration with other Work Packages and Tasks

  • The functionalities delivered in this tasks influence all other tasks in this Work Package.

Communication Strategy: when and how to raise awareness among consortium of updates in task

  • We plan to continue the tradition established in OpenAIRE+ project of holding monthly technical “status update” teleconferences for parties interested in developments in the work package.
  • Communication with technical teams through mailing list, issue tracker, mail, and wiki pages (or some similar system).
  • The code will be published and later developed in the most popular open code repository: GitHub.
  • At least one scientific paper describing functionality of the system is planned to be published.

Updated by Paolo Manghi about 9 years ago · 2 revisions