516 research outputs found

    Data Placement And Task Mapping Optimization For Big Data Workflows In The Cloud

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    Data-centric workflows naturally process and analyze a huge volume of datasets. In this new era of Big Data there is a growing need to enable data-centric workflows to perform computations at a scale far exceeding a single workstation\u27s capabilities. Therefore, this type of applications can benefit from distributed high performance computing (HPC) infrastructures like cluster, grid or cloud computing. Although data-centric workflows have been applied extensively to structure complex scientific data analysis processes, they fail to address the big data challenges as well as leverage the capability of dynamic resource provisioning in the Cloud. The concept of “big data workflows” is proposed by our research group as the next generation of data-centric workflow technologies to address the limitations of exist-ing workflows technologies in addressing big data challenges. Executing big data workflows in the Cloud is a challenging problem as work-flow tasks and data are required to be partitioned, distributed and assigned to the cloud execution sites (multiple virtual machines). In running such big data work-flows in the cloud distributed across several physical locations, the workflow execution time and the cloud resource utilization efficiency highly depends on the initial placement and distribution of the workflow tasks and datasets across the multiple virtual machines in the Cloud. Several workflow management systems have been developed for scientists to facilitate the use of workflows; however, data and work-flow task placement issue has not been sufficiently addressed yet. In this dissertation, I propose BDAP strategy (Big Data Placement strategy) for data placement and TPS (Task Placement Strategy) for task placement, which improve workflow performance by minimizing data movement across multiple virtual machines in the Cloud during the workflow execution. In addition, I propose CATS (Cultural Algorithm Task Scheduling) for workflow scheduling, which improve workflow performance by minimizing workflow execution cost. In this dissertation, I 1) formalize data and task placement problems in workflows, 2) propose a data placement algorithm that considers both initial input dataset and intermediate datasets obtained during workflow run, 3) propose a task placement algorithm that considers placement of workflow tasks before workflow run, 4) propose a workflow scheduling strategy to minimize the workflow execution cost once the deadline is provided by user and 5)perform extensive experiments in the distributed environment to validate that our proposed strategies provide an effective data and task placement solution to distribute and place big datasets and tasks into the appropriate virtual machines in the Cloud within reasonable time

    Different aspects of workflow scheduling in large-scale distributed systems

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    As large-scale distributed systems gain momentum, the scheduling of workflow applications with multiple requirements in such computing platforms has become a crucial area of research. In this paper, we investigate the workflow scheduling problem in large-scale distributed systems, from the Quality of Service (QoS) and data locality perspectives. We present a scheduling approach, considering two models of synchronization for the tasks in a workflow application: (a) communication through the network and (b) communication through temporary files. Specifically, we investigate via simulation the performance of a heterogeneous distributed system, where multiple soft real-time workflow applications arrive dynamically. The applications are scheduled under various tardiness bounds, taking into account the communication cost in the first case study and the I/O cost and data locality in the second.The work presented in this paper has been partially supported by EU, under the COST program Action IC1305, “Network for Sustainable Ultrascale Computing (NESUS)”, and by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Spain, under the project TIN2013-41350-P, “Scalable Data Management Techniques for High-End Computing Systems”

    Performance optimization and energy efficiency of big-data computing workflows

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    Next-generation e-science is producing colossal amounts of data, now frequently termed as Big Data, on the order of terabyte at present and petabyte or even exabyte in the predictable future. These scientific applications typically feature data-intensive workflows comprised of moldable parallel computing jobs, such as MapReduce, with intricate inter-job dependencies. The granularity of task partitioning in each moldable job of such big data workflows has a significant impact on workflow completion time, energy consumption, and financial cost if executed in clouds, which remains largely unexplored. This dissertation conducts an in-depth investigation into the properties of moldable jobs and provides an experiment-based validation of the performance model where the total workload of a moldable job increases along with the degree of parallelism. Furthermore, this dissertation conducts rigorous research on workflow execution dynamics in resource sharing environments and explores the interactions between workflow mapping and task scheduling on various computing platforms. A workflow optimization architecture is developed to seamlessly integrate three interrelated technical components, i.e., resource allocation, job mapping, and task scheduling. Cloud computing provides a cost-effective computing platform for big data workflows where moldable parallel computing models are widely applied to meet stringent performance requirements. Based on the moldable parallel computing performance model, a big-data workflow mapping model is constructed and a workflow mapping problem is formulated to minimize workflow makespan under a budget constraint in public clouds. This dissertation shows this problem to be strongly NP-complete and designs i) a fully polynomial-time approximation scheme for a special case with a pipeline-structured workflow executed on virtual machines of a single class, and ii) a heuristic for a generalized problem with an arbitrary directed acyclic graph-structured workflow executed on virtual machines of multiple classes. The performance superiority of the proposed solution is illustrated by extensive simulation-based results in Hadoop/YARN in comparison with existing workflow mapping models and algorithms. Considering that large-scale workflows for big data analytics have become a main consumer of energy in data centers, this dissertation also delves into the problem of static workflow mapping to minimize the dynamic energy consumption of a workflow request under a deadline constraint in Hadoop clusters, which is shown to be strongly NP-hard. A fully polynomial-time approximation scheme is designed for a special case with a pipeline-structured workflow on a homogeneous cluster and a heuristic is designed for the generalized problem with an arbitrary directed acyclic graph-structured workflow on a heterogeneous cluster. This problem is further extended to a dynamic version with deadline-constrained MapReduce workflows to minimize dynamic energy consumption in Hadoop clusters. This dissertation proposes a semi-dynamic online scheduling algorithm based on adaptive task partitioning to reduce dynamic energy consumption while meeting performance requirements from a global perspective, and also develops corresponding system modules for algorithm implementation in the Hadoop ecosystem. The performance superiority of the proposed solutions in terms of dynamic energy saving and deadline missing rate is illustrated by extensive simulation results in comparison with existing algorithms, and further validated through real-life workflow implementation and experiments using the Oozie workflow engine in Hadoop/YARN systems

    Resource management in a containerized cloud : status and challenges

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    Cloud computing heavily relies on virtualization, as with cloud computing virtual resources are typically leased to the consumer, for example as virtual machines. Efficient management of these virtual resources is of great importance, as it has a direct impact on both the scalability and the operational costs of the cloud environment. Recently, containers are gaining popularity as virtualization technology, due to the minimal overhead compared to traditional virtual machines and the offered portability. Traditional resource management strategies however are typically designed for the allocation and migration of virtual machines, so the question arises how these strategies can be adapted for the management of a containerized cloud. Apart from this, the cloud is also no longer limited to the centrally hosted data center infrastructure. New deployment models have gained maturity, such as fog and mobile edge computing, bringing the cloud closer to the end user. These models could also benefit from container technology, as the newly introduced devices often have limited hardware resources. In this survey, we provide an overview of the current state of the art regarding resource management within the broad sense of cloud computing, complementary to existing surveys in literature. We investigate how research is adapting to the recent evolutions within the cloud, being the adoption of container technology and the introduction of the fog computing conceptual model. Furthermore, we identify several challenges and possible opportunities for future research

    An efficient resource sharing technique for multi-tenant databases

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    Multi-tenancy is one of the key components of cloud computing environment. Multi-tenant database system in SaaS (Software as a Service) has gained a lot of attention in academics, research and business arena. These database systems provide scalability and economic benefits for both cloud service providers and customers(organizations/companies referred as tenants) by sharing same resources and infrastructure in isolation of shared databases, network and computing resources with Service level agreement (SLA) compliances. In a multitenant scenario, active tenants compete for resources in order to access the database. If one tenant blocks up the resources, the performance of all the other tenants may be restricted and a fair sharing of the resources may be compromised. The performance of tenants must not be affected by resource-intensive activities and volatile workloads of other tenants. Moreover, the prime goal of providers is to accomplish low cost of operation, satisfying specific schemas/SLAs of each tenant. Consequently, there is a need to design and develop effective and dynamic resource sharing algorithms which can handle above mentioned issues. This work presents a model embracing a query classification and worker sorting technique to efficiently share I/O, CPU and Memory thus enhancing dynamic resource sharing and improvising the utilization of idle instances proficiently. The model is referred as Multi-Tenant Dynamic Resource Scheduling Model (MTDRSM) .The MTDRSM support workload execution of different benchmark such as TPC-C(Transaction Processing Performance Council), YCSB(The Yahoo! Cloud Serving Benchmark)etc. and on different database such as MySQL, Oracle, H2 database etc. Experiments are conducted for different benchmarks with and without SLA compliances to evaluate the performance of MTDRSM in terms of latency and throughput achieved. The experiments show significant performance improvement over existing Mute Bench model in terms of latency and throughput

    Provendo robustez a escalonadores de workflows sensíveis às incertezas da largura de banda disponível

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    Orientadores: Edmundo Roberto Mauro Madeira, Luiz Fernando BittencourtTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de ComputaçãoResumo: Para que escalonadores de aplicações científicas modeladas como workflows derivem escalonamentos eficientes em nuvens híbridas, é necessário que se forneçam, além da descrição da demanda computacional desses aplicativos, as informações sobre o poder de computação dos recursos disponíveis, especialmente aqueles dados relacionados com a largura de banda disponível. Entretanto, a imprecisão das ferramentas de medição fazem com que as informações da largura de banda disponível fornecida aos escalonadores difiram dos valores reais que deveriam ser considerados para se obter escalonamentos quase ótimos. Escalonadores especialmente projetados para nuvens híbridas simplesmente ignoram a existência de tais imprecisões e terminam produzindo escalonamentos enganosos e de baixo desempenho, o que os tornam sensíveis às informações incertas. A presente Tese introduz um procedimento pró-ativo para fornecer um certo nível de robustez a escalonamentos derivados de escalonadores não projetados para serem robustos frente às incertezas decorrentes do uso de informações imprecisas dadas por ferramentas de medições de rede. Para tornar os escalonamentos sensíveis às incertezas em escalonamentos robustos às essas imprecisões, o procedimento propõe um refinamento (uma deflação) das estimativas da largura de banda antes de serem utilizadas pelo escalonador não robusto. Ao propor o uso de estimativas refinadas da largura de banda disponível, escalonadores inicialmente sensíveis às incertezas passaram a produzir escalonamentos com um certo nível de robustez às essas imprecisões. A eficácia e a eficiência do procedimento proposto são avaliadas através de simulação. Comparam-se, portanto, os escalonamentos gerados por escalonadores que passaram a usar o procedimento proposto com aqueles produzidos pelos mesmos escalonadores mas sem aplicar esse procedimento. Os resultados das simulações mostram que o procedimento proposto é capaz de prover robustez às incertezas da informação da largura de banda a escalonamentos derivados de escalonardes não robustos às tais incertezas. Adicionalmente, esta Tese também propõe um escalonador de aplicações científicas especialmente compostas por um conjunto de workflows. A novidade desse escalonador é que ele é flexível, ou seja, permite o uso de diferentes categorias de funções objetivos. Embora a flexibilidade proposta seja uma novidade no estado da arte, esse escalonador também é sensível às imprecisões da largura de banda. Entretanto, o procedimento mostrou-se capaz de provê-lo de robustez frente às tais incertezas. É mostrado nesta Tese que o procedimento proposto aumentou a eficácia e a eficiência de escalonadores de workflows não robustos projetados para nuvens híbridas, já que eles passaram a produzir escalonamentos com um certo nível de robustez na presença de estimativas incertas da largura de banda disponível. Dessa forma, o procedimento proposto nesta Tese é uma importante ferramenta para aprimorar os escalonadores sensíveis às estimativas incertas da banda disponível especialmente projetados para um ambiente computacional onde esses valores são imprecisos por natureza. Portanto, esta Tese propõe um procedimento que promove melhorias nas execuções de aplicações científicas em nuvens híbridasAbstract: To derive efficient schedules for the tasks of scientific applications modelled as workflows, schedulers need information on the application demands as well as on the resource availability, especially those regarding the available bandwidth. However, the lack of precision of bandwidth estimates provided by monitoring/measurement tools should be considered by the scheduler to achieve near-optimal schedules. Uncertainties of available bandwidth can be a result of imprecise measurement and monitoring network tools and/or their incapacity of estimating in advance the real value of the available bandwidth expected for the application during the scheduling step of the application. Schedulers specially designed for hybrid clouds simply ignore the inaccuracies of the given estimates and end up producing non-robust, low-performance schedules, which makes them sensitive to the uncertainties stemming from using these networking tools. This thesis introduces a proactive procedure to provide a certain level of robustness for schedules derived from schedulers that were not designed to be robust in the face of uncertainties of bandwidth estimates stemming from using unreliable networking tools. To make non-robust schedulers into robust schedulers, the procedure applies a deflation on imprecise bandwidth estimates before being used as input to non-robust schedulers. By proposing the use of refined (deflated) estimates of the available bandwidth, non-robust schedulers initially sensitive to these uncertainties started to produce robust schedules that are insensitive to these inaccuracies. The effectiveness and efficiency of the procedure in providing robustness to non-robust schedulers are evaluated through simulation. Schedules generated by induced-robustness schedulers through the use of the procedure is compared to that of produced by sensitive schedulers. In addition, this thesis also introduces a flexible scheduler for a special case of scientific applications modelled as a set of workflows grouped into ensembles. Although the novelty of this scheduler is the replacement of objective functions according to the user's needs, it is still a non-robust scheduler. However, the procedure was able to provide the necessary robustness for this flexible scheduler be able to produce robust schedules under uncertain bandwidth estimates. It is shown in this thesis that the proposed procedure enhanced the robustness of workflow schedulers designed especially for hybrid clouds as they started to produce robust schedules in the presence of uncertainties stemming from using networking tools. The proposed procedure is an important tool to furnish robustness to non-robust schedulers that are originally designed to work in a computational environment where bandwidth estimates are very likely to vary and cannot be estimated precisely in advance, bringing, therefore, improvements to the executions of scientific applications in hybrid cloudsDoutoradoCiência da ComputaçãoDoutor em Ciência da Computação2012/02778-6FAPES

    Dynamic Resource Management of Network-on-Chip Platforms for Multi-stream Video Processing

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    This thesis considers resource management in the context of parallel multiple video stream decoding, on multicore/many-core platforms. Such platforms have tens or hundreds of on-chip processing elements which are connected via a Network-on-Chip (NoC). Inefficient task allocation configurations can negatively affect the communication cost and resource contention in the platform, leading to predictability and performance issues. Efficient resource management for large-scale complex workloads is considered a challenging research problem; especially when applications such as video streaming and decoding have dynamic and unpredictable workload characteristics. For these type of applications, runtime heuristic-based task mapping techniques are required. As the application and platform size increase, decentralised resource management techniques are more desirable to overcome the reliability and performance bottlenecks in centralised management. In this work, several heuristic-based runtime resource management techniques, targeting real-time video decoding workloads are proposed. Firstly, two admission control approaches are proposed; one fully deterministic and highly predictable; the other is heuristic-based, which balances predictability and performance. Secondly, a pair of runtime task mapping schemes are presented, which make use of limited known application properties, communication cost and blocking-aware heuristics. Combined with the proposed deterministic admission controller, these techniques can provide strict timing guarantees for hard real-time streams whilst improving resource usage. The third contribution in this thesis is a distributed, bio-inspired, low-overhead, task re-allocation technique, which is used to further improve the timeliness and workload distribution of admitted soft real-time streams. Finally, this thesis explores parallelisation and resource management issues, surrounding soft real-time video streams that have been encoded using complex encoding tools and modern codecs such as High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). Properties of real streams and decoding trace data are analysed, to statistically model and generate synthetic HEVC video decoding workloads. These workloads are shown to have complex and varying task dependency structures and resource requirements. To address these challenges, two novel runtime task clustering and mapping techniques for Tile-parallel HEVC decoding are proposed. These strategies consider the workload communication to computation ratio and stream-specific characteristics to balance predictability improvement and communication energy reduction. Lastly, several task to memory controller port assignment schemes are explored to alleviate performance bottlenecks, resulting from memory traffic contention

    Dynamic Resource Allocation in Embedded, High-Performance and Cloud Computing

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    The availability of many-core computing platforms enables a wide variety of technical solutions for systems across the embedded, high-performance and cloud computing domains. However, large scale manycore systems are notoriously hard to optimise. Choices regarding resource allocation alone can account for wide variability in timeliness and energy dissipation (up to several orders of magnitude). Dynamic Resource Allocation in Embedded, High-Performance and Cloud Computing covers dynamic resource allocation heuristics for manycore systems, aiming to provide appropriate guarantees on performance and energy efficiency. It addresses different types of systems, aiming to harmonise the approaches to dynamic allocation across the complete spectrum between systems with little flexibility and strict real-time guarantees all the way to highly dynamic systems with soft performance requirements. Technical topics presented in the book include: Load and Resource Models Admission Control Feedback-based Allocation and Optimisation Search-based Allocation Heuristics Distributed Allocation based on Swarm Intelligence Value-Based Allocation Each of the topics is illustrated with examples based on realistic computational platforms such as Network-on-Chip manycore processors, grids and private cloud environments.Note.-- EUR 6,000 BPC fee funded by the EC FP7 Post-Grant Open Access Pilo
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