Data centers have recently gained significant popularity as a cost-effective platform for hosting large-scale service appli-cations. While large data centers enjoy economies of scale by amortizing initial capital investment over large number of machines, they also incur tremendous energy cost in terms of power distribution and cooling. An effective approach for saving energy in data centers is to adjust dynamically the data center capacity by turning off unused machines. How-ever, this dynamic capacity provisioning problem is known to be challenging as it requires a careful understanding of the resource demand characteristics as well as considerations to various cost factors, including task scheduling delay, ma-chine reconfiguration cost and electricity price fluctuation. In this paper, we provide a control-theoretic solution to the dynamic capacity provisioning problem that minimizes the total energy cost while meeting the performance objec-tive in terms of task scheduling delay. Specifically, we model this problem as a constrained discrete-time optimal control problem, and use Model Predictive Control (MPC) to find the optimal control policy. Through extensive analysis and simulation using real workload traces from Google’s compute clusters, we show that our proposed framework can achieve significant reduction in energy cost, while maintaining an acceptable average scheduling delay for individual tasks
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