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Powering CIROH DevCon 2026: How CIROH and 2i2c Ran Cloud Computing at Scale

· 9 min read
Arpita Patel
Assistant Director, IT and DevOpsAlabama Water Institute
April Johnson
Community and People Lead2i2c
Benjamin Lee
Development Operations EngineerAlabama Water Institute
Nia Minor
Graduate Research AssistantAlabama Water Institute
Harsha Vemula
DevOps EngineerAlabama Water Institute

At the 2026 CIROH Developers Conference (University of Utah, May 27–29) participants used a variety of tools and models on cloud infrastructure they'd never had to install, configure, or even think about. To enable that seamless experience, our Research Cyberinfrastructure team provisioned cloud resources for 15 hands-on workshops across three days in close collaboration with our partners at 2i2c. Here's what we ran, and how.

What we provisioned, by the numbers

Running an event of this scale requires more than just a single cloud context, as each workshop posed its own computing and data access requirements. CIROH Cyberinfrastructure met this challenge via a coordinated stack spanning multiple cloud providers and services. Across the 15 workshops that needed infrastructure (14 requests), the R2OHC cloud provisioned the following:

ProviderWorkshopsWhat it carried
2i2c JupyterHub on GCP12A mix of Small, Medium, Large, and GPU servers; 9 workshops ran on custom-built images
AWS3NRDS, HydroServer, TEEHR
Google NWM BigQuery API2Input data for Flood Inundation Mapping (multi-source DB / HAND visualization) and Hydroinformatics (Essential Geospatial Skills)
NSF Access1GPU-powered VMs for the "Talk to NRDS" LLM workshop

For 12 of these workshops, their backbone was the CIROH–2i2c JupyterHub, a managed JupyterHub environment that 2i2c operates on Google Cloud. For the conference, we provisioned a dedicated Workshop Hub: an ephemeral environment that lives only for the duration of the event and then spins back down.

The work that happens before anyone logs in: custom images

Nine of the twelve JupyterHub workshops needed a custom software image to support their unique computing needs. Sessions covering topics like the Community Asset Computation Hub (CCNH), Foundations of Machine Learning, CUAHSI Hydroinformatics, HydroServer, INFLECT-based Flood Inundation Mapping, Satellite Data Projection, Machine-Learned Model Emulators, and Water Quality Modeling from Hillslope to Watershed Scales each had distinct dependency stacks.

That's a coordination problem, and it was solved weeks before the conference. Workshop leads told us what their sessions needed, we defined those environments in our public awi-ciroh-image repository on GitHub, and 2i2c deployed them. By the time attendees arrived, the right libraries were already in place, all but eliminating the usual loop of haggling with installations and configurations that “work on my machine”. Instead, there were reproducible environments, ready and consistent on day one, demonstrating clear evidence of how tightly the CIROH and 2i2c teams work together.

A line graph showing usage of CIROH-2i2c JupyterHub environments over time. A spike in usage occurs on May 27th, peaking on the 27th at 132 workshop users, before leveling back off to near-zero levels after the conference's end on June 1st.
During DevCon, as many as 132 participants were logged into CIROH-2i2c JupyterHub per day.

CCNH: Instant Access to NextGen in JupyterHub

Two of the twelve workshops also marked the first appearance of the CIROH Community NextGen Hub (CCNH) at a DevCon event! This JupyterHub image contains all of the dependencies required to run the NextGen Framework, bypassing the framework's notorious complexity. CCNH represents a new paradigm where the NextGen framework can be run entirely from the comfort of a web browser, further extending its accessibility and expanding the potential for research and development with the framework.

DevCon 2026 workshops using CIROH Cyberinfrastructure

HydroShare integration: from a resource to a running notebook

Many workshop materials were published as HydroShare resources and launched straight into the Workshop Hub via a single link, pulling notebooks and data into the user's environment automatically. What might otherwise have been an onerous process of managing cluttered Downloads folders and local directory structures was instead compressed into a single click.

Why the 2i2c partnership matters

2i2c's significance in this process went far beyond just hosting the JupyterHub. 2i2c specializes in open-source cloud infrastructure for research, and that shared commitment shaped our collaboration. Our entire stack — JupyterHub, the container images, the HydroShare connector — is open source and lives in public repositories. Another institution could easily read our Dockerfiles or dependency configurations to launch similar environments.

The operational model matters too. 2i2c manages JupyterHubs for many science communities, and what they learn from one community gets shared quickly with others. Our pre-conference testing and prep was informed by dashboards 2i2c built for EarthScope's computing-intense workshops, and the temporary storage approach 2i2c and CIROH used at DevCon is now being re-used with other communities (including EarthScope).

Lessons we're carrying forward

Pre-event automation is everything. Nine custom images don't build themselves on the morning of a workshop. Front-loading that work meant we could focus on people, not infrastructure, during the event.

Treat infrastructure as tracked engineering. Thirteen GitHub issues turned a sprawling set of requests into an auditable plan — and a head start on next year.

Reproducibility scales. Version-controlled environment images are the difference between 15 consistent workshops and 15 individual troubleshooting sessions — and they let any of these workshops be re-run on the mainline (NM2.1) 2i2c JupyterHub environment.

Open-source, public-private partnerships work. Corporate cloud providers (AWS/Google Cloud), an NSF-funded computing resource, a mission-driven infrastructure partner with 2i2c, and a university research institute (CIROH) all contributed aspects of the DevCon experience. The result was a unified experience across every workshop. That's the model we want to keep building on.

To our partners at 2i2c, and to the providers and resources that backed DevCon 2026: thank you. To our DevCon networking sponsors — Lynker, Google Cloud, Civil and Environmental Engineering at The University of Utah — thank you.

And to everyone who logged in, ran the notebooks, and pushed their work forward — that's exactly what this infrastructure is for.

Interested in CIROH's cloud resources? Learn more at hub.ciroh.org/docs/services/intro or reach the CIROH Cyberinfrastructure team at ciroh-it-support@ua.edu.

CIROH Cyberinfrastructure and Hydroinformatics Team at AGU25

· 7 min read
Quinn Lee
Programmer AnalystAlabama Water Institute
Arpita Patel
Assistant Director, IT and DevOpsAlabama Water Institute

As we do every year, the CIROH team took on the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2025 by storm. The Amtrak shuttled us from famously frigid Tuscaloosa to balmy New Orleans, where we laissâmes les bons temps rouler a few months early. From December 15-19, our team shared presentations and posters (and beignets and Cajun food), demonstrating CIROH's commitment to advancing hydrologic science, open collaboration, and sharing technological advancements.

Tethys Summit 2025: Advancing Geoscience with Open-Source Web Apps

· 6 min read
Giovanni Romero
Hydroinformatics EngineerAquaveo
Manjila Singh
Graduate Research AssistantAlabama Water Institute

My Experience at Tethys Summit 2025

Earlier this month, I had the opportunity to attend Tethys Summit 2025 in Tampa, FL. It was a rewarding experience to learn about the Tethys Platform and how researchers, hydrologists, and geospatial scientists are applying it in their work. Through workshops and technical demonstrations, I gained insights into how this open-source Earth science platform is advancing environmental problem-solving.

DevCon 2025: A DevOps and Cyberinfrastructure Success Story

· 3 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

The recent DevCon 2025 event showcased not just cutting-edge development practices, but also demonstrated how modern DevOps principles and cloud infrastructure can seamlessly support large-scale technical workshops. Our team had the privilege of providing IT infrastructure and support for over 200 attendees, creating a robust learning environment through an exemplary public-private partnership.

Image of CIROH's Research Cyberinfrastructure and DevOps team. On the left, two graphs are shown depicting usage for the Google Cloud-2i2c and Jetstream2 environments.

CIROH's Research Cyberinfrastructure and DevOps team.
Left to right, top to bottom:
Manjila Singh, Arpita Patel, Nia Minor, Trupesh Patel, James Halgren; Benjamin Lee.

DevCon 2025: Hydroinformatics and Research CyberInfrastructure Keynote

· 5 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

Last week, I had the incredible opportunity to co-present a keynote at the CIROH Developers Conference (DevCon 2025), which attracted over 200 attendees. This presentation, which I presented alongside Dan Ames, focused on "CIROH HydroInformatics and Research Cyberinfrastructure." It was a fantastic experience to share insights into the powerful tools and technologies that CIROH engineers, students, researchers have been developing to advance hydrological research and operations.


Application of NOAA-OWP's NextGen Framework: DevCon 2025 and EWRI Congress 2025 Highlights

· 5 min read
Sifan A. Koriche
Research [Hydrologic] ScientistAlabama Water Institute

AWI Science and Technology Team @ CIROH DevCon2025

CIROH-AWI Science and Technology Team.
Left to right: Sagy Cohen, Steven Burian, Manjila Singh, Saide Zand, Savalan N. Neisary, Arpita Patel, Nia Minor, Trupesh Patel, Sifan A. Koriche, Jonathan Frame, Reza S. Alipour, Hari T. Jajula, Chad Perry; Josh Cunningham.

May was a pivotal month for representing the Cooperative Institute for Research to Operations in Hydrology (CIROH) and our collective work in advancing water science. As one of CIROH's Ambassadors, I had the privilege of connecting with the broader scientific community at two key events: the Environmental and Water Resources Institute (EWRI) Congress in Anchorage, Alaska, and the 2025 CIROH Developers Conference in Burlington, Vermont.

Google Cloud Next 2025: Innovation at Scale ✨

· 5 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

Last week at Google Cloud Next representing our CIROH cloud-based computing efforts! With more than 30,000 participants, Google Next always amazes me! It's huge, engaging on so many levels! Engaging booths, networking opportunities, great presentations, workshops, AI coach for basketball, incredible keynote from an amazing team! Event was not just a conference, but a celebration of innovation and a glimpse into the future of cloud computing! Great to see how Gemini is transforming data manipulation in BigQuery. The ability to use natural language to query, transform, and visualize data is revolutionizing how we interact with massive datasets. Gabe Weiss's demo particularly showcased the potential for non-specialists to derive insights from complex data.

If you missed the keynote, I highly recommend watching the recording here: GCN25 Keynote Video

CIROH at AGU 2024

· 2 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

AGU24 brought together the world’s leading minds in Earth and space sciences. CIROH participated actively, showcasing advances in water prediction, modeling techniques and many more technologies.

Presentations and Posters 📊

The conference provided an excellent platform for CIROH researchers to present their groundbreaking work. Our team delivered impactful presentations and poster sessions highlighting CIROH’s innovative work, including advancements in water prediction systems and community water modeling.

These sessions sparked thought-provoking discussions and fostered collaborations with other researchers. For those who missed it, posters and presentation slides are now available here. Feel free to explore these materials and share your thoughts. 📝

CIROH Science Meeting 2024

· 4 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

The 2024 CIROH Science Meeting was a huge success, bringing together researchers, federal partners, and consortium members both in person and virtually. We're excited to share the valuable resources from this year's meeting with the wider CIROH community.

Slides and pictures from the various sessions, keynotes, and the Federal Town Hall have all been uploaded to a shared drive for easy access. You can find links to these materials here: Access the Shared Drive with Presentation Slides

CIROH Developers Conference 2024

· 2 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

CIROH Developers Conference 2024

DevCon2024

The CIROH team recently participated in the 2nd Annual CIROH Developers Conference (DevCon24), held from May 29th to June 1st,2024. The conference brought together a diverse group of water professionals to exchange knowledge and explore cutting-edge research in the field of hydrological forecasting.

AWRA 2024 Spring Conference

· 2 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

AWRA 2024 Spring Conference

The CIROH CyberInfrastructure team recently participated in the AWRA 2024 Spring Conference, co-hosted by the Alabama Water Institute at the University of Alabama.

Themed "Water Risk and Resilience: Research and Sustainable Solutions," the conference brought together a diverse group of water professionals to exchange knowledge and explore cutting-edge research in the field.

Google Cloud Next '24: A Flood of Innovation and Inspiration

· 5 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute

Google Cloud Next '24

Hello everyone, and thanks for stopping by!

I recently had the incredible opportunity to attend Google Cloud Next 2024 in person for the first time, and it was truly an amazing experience. From insightful keynote presentations and workshops to vibrant booths buzzing with connections, the event was a whirlwind of innovation and inspiration.

Monthly News Update - March 2024

· 2 min read
Arpita Patel
DevOps Manager and Enterprise ArchitectAlabama Water Institute
Accelerating Innovation: CIROH's March 2024 Update

The CIROH team has been diligently accelerating research cyberinfrastructure capabilities this month. We're thrilled to share key milestones achieved in enhancing the Community NextGen project and our cloud/on-premises platforms.