452 research outputs found

    A Review of Energy-aware Cloud Computing Surveys

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    The increasing demands on the usage of data centers especially in provisioning cloud applications (i.e. data-intensive applications) have drastically increased the energy consumption and becoming a critical issue. Failing to handle the increasing in energy consumption leads to the negative impact on the environment, and also negatively affecting the cloud providers’ profits due to increasing costs. Various surveys have been carried out to address and classify energy-aware approaches and solutions. As an active research area with increasing number of proposals, more surveys are needed to support researchers in the research area. Thus, in this paper, we intend to provide the current state of existing related surveys that serve as a guideline for the researchers as well as the potential reviewers to embark into a new concern and dimension to compliment existing related surveys. Our review highlights four main topics and concludes to some recommendations for the future survey

    EdgeMORE: improving resource allocation with multiple options from tenants

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    International audienceUnder the paradigm of Edge Computing (EC), a Network Operator (NO) deploys computational resources at the network edge and let third-party Service Providers (SPs) run on top of them, as tenants. Besides the clear advantages for SPs and final users thanks to the vicinity of computation nodes, a NO aims to allocate edge resources in order to increase its own utility, including bandwidth saving, operational cost reduction, QoE for its users, etc. However, while the number of third-party services competing for edge resources is expected to dramatically grow, the resources deployed cannot increase accordingly, due to physical limitations. Therefore, smart strategies are needed to fully exploit the potential of EC, despite its constrains. To this aim, we propose to leverage service adaptability, a dimension that has mainly been neglected so far: each service can adapt to the amount of resources that the NO has allocated to it, balancing the fraction of service computation performed at the edge and relying on remote servers, e.g., in the Cloud, for the rest. We propose EdgeMORE, a resource allocation strategy in which SPs express their capabilities to adapt to different resource constraints, by declaring the different configurations under which they are able to run, specifying the resources needed and the utility provided to the NO. The NO then chooses the most convenient option per each SP, in order to maximize the total utility. We formalize EdgeMORE as a Integer Linear Program. We show via simulation that EdgeMORE greatly improves EC utility with respect to the standard where no multiple options for running services are allowed
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