8,826 research outputs found
SDN-based virtual machine management for cloud data centers
Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is an emerging paradigm to logically centralize the network control plane and automate the configuration of individual network elements. At the same time, in Cloud Data Centers (DCs), even though network and server resources converge over the same infrastructure and typically over a single administrative entity, disjoint control mechanisms are used for their respective management. In this paper, we propose a unified server-network control mechanism for converged ICT environments. We present a SDN-based orchestration framework for live Virtual Machine (VM) management where server hypervisors exploit temporal network information to migrate VMs and minimize the network-wide communication cost of the resulting traffic dynamics. A prototype implementation is presented and Mininet is used to evaluate the impact of diverse orchestration algorithms
A Survey on Load Balancing Algorithms for VM Placement in Cloud Computing
The emergence of cloud computing based on virtualization technologies brings
huge opportunities to host virtual resource at low cost without the need of
owning any infrastructure. Virtualization technologies enable users to acquire,
configure and be charged on pay-per-use basis. However, Cloud data centers
mostly comprise heterogeneous commodity servers hosting multiple virtual
machines (VMs) with potential various specifications and fluctuating resource
usages, which may cause imbalanced resource utilization within servers that may
lead to performance degradation and service level agreements (SLAs) violations.
To achieve efficient scheduling, these challenges should be addressed and
solved by using load balancing strategies, which have been proved to be NP-hard
problem. From multiple perspectives, this work identifies the challenges and
analyzes existing algorithms for allocating VMs to PMs in infrastructure
Clouds, especially focuses on load balancing. A detailed classification
targeting load balancing algorithms for VM placement in cloud data centers is
investigated and the surveyed algorithms are classified according to the
classification. The goal of this paper is to provide a comprehensive and
comparative understanding of existing literature and aid researchers by
providing an insight for potential future enhancements.Comment: 22 Pages, 4 Figures, 4 Tables, in pres
An Algorithm for Network and Data-aware Placement of Multi-Tier Applications in Cloud Data Centers
Today's Cloud applications are dominated by composite applications comprising
multiple computing and data components with strong communication correlations
among them. Although Cloud providers are deploying large number of computing
and storage devices to address the ever increasing demand for computing and
storage resources, network resource demands are emerging as one of the key
areas of performance bottleneck. This paper addresses network-aware placement
of virtual components (computing and data) of multi-tier applications in data
centers and formally defines the placement as an optimization problem. The
simultaneous placement of Virtual Machines and data blocks aims at reducing the
network overhead of the data center network infrastructure. A greedy heuristic
is proposed for the on-demand application components placement that localizes
network traffic in the data center interconnect. Such optimization helps
reducing communication overhead in upper layer network switches that will
eventually reduce the overall traffic volume across the data center. This, in
turn, will help reducing packet transmission delay, increasing network
performance, and minimizing the energy consumption of network components.
Experimental results demonstrate performance superiority of the proposed
algorithm over other approaches where it outperforms the state-of-the-art
network-aware application placement algorithm across all performance metrics by
reducing the average network cost up to 67% and network usage at core switches
up to 84%, as well as increasing the average number of application deployments
up to 18%.Comment: Submitted for publication consideration for the Journal of Network
and Computer Applications (JNCA). Total page: 28. Number of figures: 15
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