11 research outputs found

    Performance of Computer Systems; Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Modelling and Performance Evaluation of Computer Systems, Vienna, Austria, February 6-8, 1979

    Get PDF
    These proceedings are a collection of contributions to computer system performance, selected by the usual refereeing process from papers submitted to the symposium, as well as a few invited papers representing significant novel contributions made during the last year. They represent the thrust and vitality of the subject as well as its capacity to identify important basic problems and major application areas. The main methodological problems appear in the underlying queueing theoretic aspects, in the deterministic analysis of waiting time phenomena, in workload characterization and representation, in the algorithmic aspects of model processing, and in the analysis of measurement data. Major areas for applications are computer architectures, data bases, computer networks, and capacity planning. The international importance of the area of computer system performance was well reflected at the symposium by participants from 19 countries. The mixture of participants was also evident in the institutions which they represented: 35% from universities, 25% from governmental research organizations, but also 30% from industry and 10% from non-research government bodies. This proves that the area is reaching a stage of maturity where it can contribute directly to progress in practical problems

    Ermittlung des Leistungsverhaltens von Timesharing-Systemen

    Get PDF

    A comparison of some performance evaluation techniques

    Get PDF
    In this thesis we look at three approaches to modelling interactive computer systems: Simulation, Operational analysis and Performance-Oriented design. The simulation approach, presented first, is applied to a general purpose, multiprogrammed, machine independent, virtual memory computer system. The model is used to study the effects of different performance parameters upon important performance indices. It is also used to compare or validate the results produced by the other two methods. The major drawback of the simulation model (i.e. its relatively high cost) has been overcome by combining regression techniques with simulation, using simple experimental case studies. Next, operational analysis was reviewed in a hierarchical way (starting by analysing a single-resource queue and ending up by analysing a multi-class customer general interactive system), to study the performance model of general interactive systems. The results of the model were compared with the performance indices produced using the simulation results. The performance-oriented design technique was the third method used for building system performance models. Here, several optimization design problems have been reviewed to minimize the response time or maximize the system throughput subject to a cost constraint. Again, the model results were compared with the simulation results using different cost constraints. We suggest finally, that the above methods should be used together to assist the designer in building computer performance models

    Workload Modeling for Computer Systems Performance Evaluation

    Full text link

    Scheduling for today’s computer systems: bridging theory and practice

    Get PDF
    Scheduling is a fundamental technique for improving performance in computer systems. From web servers to routers to operating systems, how the bottleneck device is scheduled has an enormous impact on the performance of the system as a whole. Given the immense literature studying scheduling, it is easy to think that we already understand enough about scheduling. But, modern computer system designs have highlighted a number of disconnects between traditional analytic results and the needs of system designers. In particular, the idealized policies, metrics, and models used by analytic researchers do not match the policies, metrics, and scenarios that appear in real systems. The goal of this thesis is to take a step towards modernizing the theory of scheduling in order to provide results that apply to today’s computer systems, and thus ease the burden on system designers. To accomplish this goal, we provide new results that help to bridge each of the disconnects mentioned above. We will move beyond the study of idealized policies by introducing a new analytic framework where the focus is on scheduling heuristics and techniques rather than individual policies. By moving beyond the study of individual policies, our results apply to the complex hybrid policies that are often used in practice. For example, our results enable designers to understand how the policies that favor small job sizes are affected by the fact that real systems only have estimates of job sizes. In addition, we move beyond the study of mean response time and provide results characterizing the distribution of response time and the fairness of scheduling policies. These results allow us to understand how scheduling affects QoS guarantees and whether favoring small job sizes results in large job sizes being treated unfairly. Finally, we move beyond the simplified models traditionally used in scheduling research and provide results characterizing the effectiveness of scheduling in multiserver systems and when users are interactive. These results allow us to answer questions about the how to design multiserver systems and how to choose a workload generator when evaluating new scheduling designs

    Management. A continuing bibliography with indexes

    Get PDF
    This bibliography cites 604 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system in 1979 covering the management of research and development, contracts, production, logistics, personnel, safety, reliability and quality control. Program, project, and systems management; management policy, philosophy, tools, and techniques; decision making processes for managers; technology assessment; management of urban problems; and information for managers on Federal resources, expenditures, financing, and budgeting are also covered. Abstracts are provided as well as subject, personal author, and corporate source indexes
    corecore