3,116 research outputs found

    Power Management Techniques for Data Centers: A Survey

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    With growing use of internet and exponential growth in amount of data to be stored and processed (known as 'big data'), the size of data centers has greatly increased. This, however, has resulted in significant increase in the power consumption of the data centers. For this reason, managing power consumption of data centers has become essential. In this paper, we highlight the need of achieving energy efficiency in data centers and survey several recent architectural techniques designed for power management of data centers. We also present a classification of these techniques based on their characteristics. This paper aims to provide insights into the techniques for improving energy efficiency of data centers and encourage the designers to invent novel solutions for managing the large power dissipation of data centers.Comment: Keywords: Data Centers, Power Management, Low-power Design, Energy Efficiency, Green Computing, DVFS, Server Consolidatio

    Online Algorithms for Geographical Load Balancing

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    It has recently been proposed that Internet energy costs, both monetary and environmental, can be reduced by exploiting temporal variations and shifting processing to data centers located in regions where energy currently has low cost. Lightly loaded data centers can then turn off surplus servers. This paper studies online algorithms for determining the number of servers to leave on in each data center, and then uses these algorithms to study the environmental potential of geographical load balancing (GLB). A commonly suggested algorithm for this setting is ā€œreceding horizon controlā€ (RHC), which computes the provisioning for the current time by optimizing over a window of predicted future loads. We show that RHC performs well in a homogeneous setting, in which all servers can serve all jobs equally well; however, we also prove that differences in propagation delays, servers, and electricity prices can cause RHC perform badly, So, we introduce variants of RHC that are guaranteed to perform as well in the face of such heterogeneity. These algorithms are then used to study the feasibility of powering a continent-wide set of data centers mostly by renewable sources, and to understand what portfolio of renewable energy is most effective

    Managing energy and server resources in hosting centers

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    A Hybrid Optimization Algorithm for Efficient Virtual Machine Migration and Task Scheduling Using a Cloud-Based Adaptive Multi-Agent Deep Deterministic Policy Gradient Technique

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    This To achieve optimal system performance in the quickly developing field of cloud computing, efficient resource managementā€”which includes accurate job scheduling and optimized Virtual Machine (VM) migrationā€”is essential. The Adaptive Multi-Agent System with Deep Deterministic Policy Gradient (AMS-DDPG) Algorithm is used in this study to propose a cutting-edge hybrid optimization algorithm for effective virtual machine migration and task scheduling. An sophisticated combination of the War Strategy Optimization (WSO) and Rat Swarm Optimizer (RSO) algorithms, the Iterative Concept of War and Rat Swarm (ICWRS) algorithm is the foundation of this technique. Notably, ICWRS optimizes the system with an amazing 93% accuracy, especially for load balancing, job scheduling, and virtual machine migration. The VM migration and task scheduling flexibility and efficiency are greatly improved by the AMS-DDPG technology, which uses a powerful combination of deterministic policy gradient and deep reinforcement learning. By assuring the best possible resource allocation, the Adaptive Multi-Agent System method enhances decision-making even more. Performance in cloud-based virtualized systems is significantly enhanced by our hybrid method, which combines deep learning and multi-agent coordination. Extensive tests that include a detailed comparison with conventional techniques verify the effectiveness of the suggested strategy. As a consequence, our hybrid optimization approach is successful. The findings show significant improvements in system efficiency, shorter job completion times, and optimum resource utilization. Cloud-based systems have unrealized potential for synergistic optimization, as shown by the integration of ICWRS inside the AMS-DDPG framework. Enabling a high-performing and sustainable cloud computing infrastructure that can adapt to the changing needs of modern computing paradigms is made possible by this strategic resource allocation, which is attained via careful computational utilization

    On Reliability-Aware Server Consolidation in Cloud Datacenters

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    In the past few years, datacenter (DC) energy consumption has become an important issue in technology world. Server consolidation using virtualization and virtual machine (VM) live migration allows cloud DCs to improve resource utilization and hence energy efficiency. In order to save energy, consolidation techniques try to turn off the idle servers, while because of workload fluctuations, these offline servers should be turned on to support the increased resource demands. These repeated on-off cycles could affect the hardware reliability and wear-and-tear of servers and as a result, increase the maintenance and replacement costs. In this paper we propose a holistic mathematical model for reliability-aware server consolidation with the objective of minimizing total DC costs including energy and reliability costs. In fact, we try to minimize the number of active PMs and racks, in a reliability-aware manner. We formulate the problem as a Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) model which is in form of NP-complete. Finally, we evaluate the performance of our approach in different scenarios using extensive numerical MATLAB simulations.Comment: International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Computing (ISPDC), Innsbruck, Austria, 201

    Energy and Performance: Management of Virtual Machines: Provisioning, Placement, and Consolidation

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    Cloud computing is a new computing paradigm that oļ¬€ers scalable storage and compute resources to users on demand through Internet. Public cloud providers operate large-scale data centers around the world to handle a large number of users request. However, data centers consume an immense amount of electrical energy that can lead to high operating costs and carbon emissions. One of the most common and eļ¬€ective method in order to reduce energy consumption is Dynamic Virtual Machines Consolidation (DVMC) enabled by the virtualization technology. DVMC dynamically consolidates Virtual Machines (VMs) into the minimum number of active servers and then switches the idle servers into a power-saving mode to save energy. However, maintaining the desired level of Quality-of-Service (QoS) between data centers and their users is critical for satisfying usersā€™ expectations concerning performance. Therefore, the main challenge is to minimize the data center energy consumption while maintaining the required QoS. This thesis address this challenge by presenting novel DVMC approaches to reduce the energy consumption of data centers and improve resource utilization under workload independent quality of service constraints. These approaches can be divided into three main categories: heuristic, meta-heuristic and machine learning. Our ļ¬rst contribution is a heuristic algorithm for solving the DVMC problem. The algorithm uses a linear regression-based prediction model to detect over-loaded servers based on the historical utilization data. Then it migrates some VMs from the over-loaded servers to avoid further performance degradations. Moreover, our algorithm consolidates VMs on fewer number of server for energy saving. The second and third contributions are two novel DVMC algorithms based on the Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach. RL is interesting for highly adaptive and autonomous management in dynamic environments. For this reason, we use RL to solve two main sub-problems in VM consolidation. The ļ¬rst sub-problem is the server power mode detection (sleep or active). The second sub-problem is to ļ¬nd an eļ¬€ective solution for server status detection (overloaded or non-overloaded). The fourth contribution of this thesis is an online optimization meta-heuristic algorithm called Ant Colony System-based Placement Optimization (ACS-PO). ACS is a suitable approach for VM consolidation due to the ease of parallelization, that it is close to the optimal solution, and its polynomial worst-case time complexity. The simulation results show that ACS-PO provides substantial improvement over other heuristic algorithms in reducing energy consumption, the number of VM migrations, and performance degradations. Our ļ¬fth contribution is a Hierarchical VM management (HiVM) architecture based on a three-tier data center topology which is very common use in data centers. HiVM has the ability to scale across many thousands of servers with energy eļ¬ƒciency. Our sixth contribution is a Utilization Prediction-aware Best Fit Decreasing (UP-BFD) algorithm. UP-BFD can avoid SLA violations and needless migrations by taking into consideration the current and predicted future resource requirements for allocation, consolidation, and placement of VMs. Finally, the seventh and the last contribution is a novel Self-Adaptive Resource Management System (SARMS) in data centers. To achieve scalability, SARMS uses a hierarchical architecture that is partially inspired from HiVM. Moreover, SARMS provides self-adaptive ability for resource management by dynamically adjusting the utilization thresholds for each server in data centers.Siirretty Doriast

    An energy optimization with improved QOS approach for adaptive cloud resources

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    In recent times, the utilization of cloud computing VMs is extremely enhanced in our day-to-day life due to the ample utilization of digital applications, network appliances, portable gadgets, and information devices etc. In this cloud computing VMs numerous different schemes can be implemented like multimedia-signal-processing-methods. Thus, efficient performance of these cloud-computing VMs becomes an obligatory constraint, precisely for these multimedia-signal-processing-methods. However, large amount of energy consumption and reduction in efficiency of these cloud-computing VMs are the key issues faced by different cloud computing organizations. Therefore, here, we have introduced a dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) based adaptive cloud resource re-configurability (ACRR) technique for cloud computing devices, which efficiently reduces energy consumption, as well as perform operations in very less time. We have demonstrated an efficient resource allocation and utilization technique to optimize by reducing different costs of the model. We have also demonstrated efficient energy optimization techniques by reducing task loads. Our experimental outcomes shows the superiority of our proposed model ACRR in terms of average run time, power consumption and average power required than any other state-of-art techniques
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