10 research outputs found

    Future PON Data Centre Networks

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    Significant research efforts have been devoted over the last decade to design efficient data centre networks. However, major concerns are still raised about the power consumption of data centres and its impact on global warming in the first place and on the electricity bill of data centres in the second place. Passive Optical Network (PON) technology with its proven performance in residential access networks can provide energy efficient, high capacity, low cost, scalable, and highly elastic solutions to support connectivity inside modern data centres. Here, we focus on introducing PONs in the architecture of data centres to resolve many issues in current data centre designs such as high cost and high power consumption resulting from the large number of access and aggregation switches needed to interconnect hundreds of thousands of servers. PONs can also overcome the problems of switch oversubscription and unbalanced traffic in data centres where PON architectures and protocols have historically been optimised to deal with these problems and handle bursty traffic efficiently. In this thesis, five novel PON data centre designs are proposed and compared to facilitate intra and inter rack communications. In addition to maximising the use of only passive optical devices, other challenges have to be addressed by these designs including off-loading the inter-rack traffic from the Optical Line Terminal (OLT) switch to avoid undesired power consumption and delays, facilitating multi-path routing, and reducing or eliminating the need for expensive tuneable lasers. The Scalability of the proposed architectures in terms of efficiently accommodating hundreds of thousands of servers is discussed. CAPEX and energy consumption of the proposed architectures are also investigated and savings compared to conventional architectures, such as the Fat-Tree and BCube, are demonstrated. The Routing and Wavelength Assignment (RWA) in intra and inter rack communication and the resource provisioning needed to cater for different applications that can be hosted in data centre are optimised using Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) models to minimise the PON designs power consumption. Furthermore, real-time energy-efficient routing and resource provisioning algorithms are developed. In addition to optimising the power consumption, delay is also considered for the delay sensitive applications that can be hosted in the proposed data centre architectures. To further reduce power consumption and overcome issues related to link oversubscription and multi-path routing, Software Defined Network (SDN) based design is proposed

    VihreäIT metriikoiden analysointi sekä mittausviitekehyksen luonti Sonera Helsinki Datakeskus (HDC) projektille.

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    The two objectives of this thesis were to investigate and evaluate the most suitable set of energy efficiency metrics for Sonera Helsinki Data Center (HDC), and to analyze which energy efficient technologies could be implemented and in what order to gain most impact. Sustainable IT is a complex matter, and it has two components. First and the more complex matter is the energy efficiency and energy-proportionality of the IT environment. The second is the use of renewable energy sources. Both of these need to be addressed. This thesis is a theoretical study, and it focuses on energy efficiency. The use of off-site renewables is outside of the scope of this thesis. The main aim of this thesis is to improve energy efficiency through effective metric framework. In the final metric framework, metrics that target renewable energy usage in the data center are included as they are important from CO2 emission reduction perspective. The selection of energy efficient solutions in this thesis are examples from most important data center technology categories, and do not try to cover the whole array of different solutions to improve energy efficiency in a data center. The ontological goal is to present main energy efficiency metrics available in scientific discourse, and also present examples of energy efficient solutions in most energy consuming technology domains inside the data center. Even though some of the concepts are quite abstract, realism is taken into account in every analysis. The epistemology in this thesis is based on scientific articles that include empirical validation and scientific peer review. This forms the origin of the used knowledge and the nature of this knowledge. The findings from this thesis are considered valid and reliable based on the epistemology of scientific articles, and by using the actual planning documents of Sonera HDC. The reasoning in this thesis is done in abstracto, but there are many empirical results that qualify the results also as ´in concreto´. Findings are significant for Sonera HDC but they are also applicable for any general data center project or company seeking energy efficiency in their data centers.Lopputyöllä on kaksi päätavoitetta. Ensimmäinen tavoite on löytää sopivin mittausviitekehys energiatehokkuuden osoittamiseksi Sonera Helsinki Datakeskukselle (HDC). Toisena tavoitteena on analysoida, mitä energiatehokkaita ratkaisuja tulisi implementoida ja missä järjestyksessä, saavuttaakseen mahdollisimman ison vaikutuksen. Vihreä IT on monimutkainen asia ja samalla siihen liittyy kaksi eri komponenttia. Ensimmäisenä komponenttina, ja merkityksellisempänä sekä monimutkaisempana, on energiatehokkuus ja energian kulutuksen mukautuvuus suhteessa työkuormaan. Toinen komponentti vihreän IT:n osalta on uusiutuvien energialähteiden käyttäminen. Molemmat komponentit on huomioitava. Lopputyö on teoreettinen tutkimus. Lopputyön ontologinen tavoite on esittää keskeisimmät energiatehokkuusmittarit, jotka ovat saatavilla tieteellisessä keskustelussa, ja esittää myös esimerkkejä energiatehokkaista ratkaisuista teknologia-alueisiin, jotka kuluttavat eniten energiaa data keskuksissa. Vaikka osa esitetyistä ratkaisuista on melko abstraktissa todellisuudessa, realismi on pyritty ottamaan huomioon arvioita tehdessä. Epistemologisesti tämä lopputyö perustuu tieteellisiin artikkeleihin, joissa on tehty empiiristä validointia ja tiedeyhteisön vertaisarviointia tiedon totuusarvosta. Kirjoittaja pyrkii välttämään oman arvomaailman ja subjektiivisen näkemyksen tuomista analyysiin pyrkimällä enemmänkin arvioimaan ratkaisuja perustuen päätavoitteeseen, joka on sekä lisätä energiatehokkuutta että vähentää CO2 -päästöjä datakeskuksessa. Lopputyön löydökset todetaan valideiksi ja luotettaviksi, koska ne perustuvat tieteellisten artikkeleiden epistemologiaan ja siihen, että arvioinnin pohjana on käytetty todellisia Sonera HDC -projektin suunnitteludokumentteja. Päätelmät ja analyysit ovat abstrahoituja, mutta perustuvat empiirisiin tuloksiin, jotka koskevat käytännön tekemistä sekä valintoja. Löydökset ovat merkittäviä Sonera HDC -projektin kannalta, ja myös muille datakeskuksille, jotka haluavat toimia kestävän kehityksen pohjalta

    On the design of efficient caching systems

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    Content distribution is currently the prevalent Internet use case, accounting for the majority of global Internet traffic and growing exponentially. There is general consensus that the most effective method to deal with the large amount of content demand is through the deployment of massively distributed caching infrastructures as the means to localise content delivery traffic. Solutions based on caching have been already widely deployed through Content Delivery Networks. Ubiquitous caching is also a fundamental aspect of the emerging Information-Centric Networking paradigm which aims to rethink the current Internet architecture for long term evolution. Distributed content caching systems are expected to grow substantially in the future, in terms of both footprint and traffic carried and, as such, will become substantially more complex and costly. This thesis addresses the problem of designing scalable and cost-effective distributed caching systems that will be able to efficiently support the expected massive growth of content traffic and makes three distinct contributions. First, it produces an extensive theoretical characterisation of sharding, which is a widely used technique to allocate data items to resources of a distributed system according to a hash function. Based on the findings unveiled by this analysis, two systems are designed contributing to the abovementioned objective. The first is a framework and related algorithms for enabling efficient load-balanced content caching. This solution provides qualitative advantages over previously proposed solutions, such as ease of modelling and availability of knobs to fine-tune performance, as well as quantitative advantages, such as 2x increase in cache hit ratio and 19-33% reduction in load imbalance while maintaining comparable latency to other approaches. The second is the design and implementation of a caching node enabling 20 Gbps speeds based on inexpensive commodity hardware. We believe these contributions advance significantly the state of the art in distributed caching systems

    Resilient and Scalable Forwarding for Software-Defined Networks with P4-Programmable Switches

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    Traditional networking devices support only fixed features and limited configurability. Network softwarization leverages programmable software and hardware platforms to remove those limitations. In this context the concept of programmable data planes allows directly to program the packet processing pipeline of networking devices and create custom control plane algorithms. This flexibility enables the design of novel networking mechanisms where the status quo struggles to meet high demands of next-generation networks like 5G, Internet of Things, cloud computing, and industry 4.0. P4 is the most popular technology to implement programmable data planes. However, programmable data planes, and in particular, the P4 technology, emerged only recently. Thus, P4 support for some well-established networking concepts is still lacking and several issues remain unsolved due to the different characteristics of programmable data planes in comparison to traditional networking. The research of this thesis focuses on two open issues of programmable data planes. First, it develops resilient and efficient forwarding mechanisms for the P4 data plane as there are no satisfying state of the art best practices yet. Second, it enables BIER in high-performance P4 data planes. BIER is a novel, scalable, and efficient transport mechanism for IP multicast traffic which has only very limited support of high-performance forwarding platforms yet. The main results of this thesis are published as 8 peer-reviewed and one post-publication peer-reviewed publication. The results cover the development of suitable resilience mechanisms for P4 data planes, the development and implementation of resilient BIER forwarding in P4, and the extensive evaluations of all developed and implemented mechanisms. Furthermore, the results contain a comprehensive P4 literature study. Two more peer-reviewed papers contain additional content that is not directly related to the main results. They implement congestion avoidance mechanisms in P4 and develop a scheduling concept to find cost-optimized load schedules based on day-ahead forecasts
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