7,701 research outputs found
EPOBF: Energy Efficient Allocation of Virtual Machines in High Performance Computing Cloud
Cloud computing has become more popular in provision of computing resources
under virtual machine (VM) abstraction for high performance computing (HPC)
users to run their applications. A HPC cloud is such cloud computing
environment. One of challenges of energy efficient resource allocation for VMs
in HPC cloud is tradeoff between minimizing total energy consumption of
physical machines (PMs) and satisfying Quality of Service (e.g. performance).
On one hand, cloud providers want to maximize their profit by reducing the
power cost (e.g. using the smallest number of running PMs). On the other hand,
cloud customers (users) want highest performance for their applications. In
this paper, we focus on the scenario that scheduler does not know global
information about user jobs and user applications in the future. Users will
request shortterm resources at fixed start times and non interrupted durations.
We then propose a new allocation heuristic (named Energy-aware and Performance
per watt oriented Bestfit (EPOBF)) that uses metric of performance per watt to
choose which most energy-efficient PM for mapping each VM (e.g. maximum of MIPS
per Watt). Using information from Feitelson's Parallel Workload Archive to
model HPC jobs, we compare the proposed EPOBF to state of the art heuristics on
heterogeneous PMs (each PM has multicore CPU). Simulations show that the EPOBF
can reduce significant total energy consumption in comparison with state of the
art allocation heuristics.Comment: 10 pages, in Procedings of International Conference on Advanced
Computing and Applications, Journal of Science and Technology, Vietnamese
Academy of Science and Technology, ISSN 0866-708X, Vol. 51, No. 4B, 201
Energy-Aware Cloud Management through Progressive SLA Specification
Novel energy-aware cloud management methods dynamically reallocate
computation across geographically distributed data centers to leverage regional
electricity price and temperature differences. As a result, a managed VM may
suffer occasional downtimes. Current cloud providers only offer high
availability VMs, without enough flexibility to apply such energy-aware
management. In this paper we show how to analyse past traces of dynamic cloud
management actions based on electricity prices and temperatures to estimate VM
availability and price values. We propose a novel SLA specification approach
for offering VMs with different availability and price values guaranteed over
multiple SLAs to enable flexible energy-aware cloud management. We determine
the optimal number of such SLAs as well as their availability and price
guaranteed values. We evaluate our approach in a user SLA selection simulation
using Wikipedia and Grid'5000 workloads. The results show higher customer
conversion and 39% average energy savings per VM.Comment: 14 pages, conferenc
Energy Efficient Servers: Blueprints for Data Center Optimization
Energy Efficient Servers: Blueprints for Data Center Optimization introduces engineers and IT professionals to the power management technologies and techniques used in energy efficient servers. The book includes a deep examination of different features used in processors, memory, interconnects, I/O devices, and other platform components. It outlines the power and performance impact of these features and the role firmware and software play in initialization and control. Using examples from cloud, HPC, and enterprise environments, the book demonstrates how various power management technologies are utilized across a range of server utilization. It teaches the reader how to monitor, analyze, and optimize their environment to best suit their needs. It shares optimization techniques used by data center administrators and system optimization experts at the world’s most advanced data centers
LIKWID Monitoring Stack: A flexible framework enabling job specific performance monitoring for the masses
System monitoring is an established tool to measure the utilization and
health of HPC systems. Usually system monitoring infrastructures make no
connection to job information and do not utilize hardware performance
monitoring (HPM) data. To increase the efficient use of HPC systems automatic
and continuous performance monitoring of jobs is an essential component. It can
help to identify pathological cases, provides instant performance feedback to
the users, offers initial data to judge on the optimization potential of
applications and helps to build a statistical foundation about application
specific system usage. The LIKWID monitoring stack is a modular framework build
on top of the LIKWID tools library. It aims on enabling job specific
performance monitoring using HPM data, system metrics and application-level
data for small to medium sized commodity clusters. Moreover, it is designed to
integrate in existing monitoring infrastructures to speed up the change from
pure system monitoring to job-aware monitoring.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for HPCMASPA 2017, the Workshop on
Monitoring and Analysis for High Performance Computing Systems Plus
Applications, held in conjunction with IEEE Cluster 2017, Honolulu, HI,
September 5, 201
- …