1,573 research outputs found
Multi-capacity bin packing with dependent items and its application to the packing of brokered workloads in virtualized environments
Providing resource allocation with performance
predictability guarantees is increasingly important in cloud
platforms, especially for data-intensive applications, in which
performance depends greatly on the available rates of data
transfer between the various computing/storage hosts underlying
the virtualized resources assigned to the application. Existing
resource allocation solutions either assume that applications
manage their data transfer between their virtualized resources, or
that cloud providers manage their internal networking resources.
With the increased prevalence of brokerage services in cloud
platforms, there is a need for resource allocation solutions that
provides predictability guarantees in settings, in which neither
application scheduling nor cloud provider resources can be
managed/controlled by the broker. This paper addresses this
problem, as we define the Network-Constrained Packing (NCP)
problem of finding the optimal mapping of brokered resources
to applications with guaranteed performance predictability. We
prove that NCP is NP-hard, and we define two special instances
of the problem, for which exact solutions can be found efficiently.
We develop a greedy heuristic to solve the general instance of the
NCP problem , and we evaluate its efficiency using simulations
on various application workloads, and network models.This work was done while author was at Boston University. It was partially supported by NSF CISE awards #1430145, #1414119, #1239021 and #1012798. (1430145 - NSF CISE; 1414119 - NSF CISE; 1239021 - NSF CISE; 1012798 - NSF CISE
Network-constrained packing of brokered workloads in virtualized environments
Providing resource allocation with performance predictability guarantees is increasingly important in cloud platforms, especially for data-intensive applications, in which performance depends greatly on the available rates of data transfer between the various computing/storage hosts underlying the virtualized resources assigned to the application. Existing resource allocation solutions either assume that applications manage their data transfer between their virtualized resources, or that cloud providers manage their internal networking resources.With the increased prevalence of brokerage services in cloud platforms, there is a need for resource allocation solutions that provides predictability guarantees in settings, in which neither application scheduling nor cloud provider resources can be managed/controlled by the broker. This paper addresses this problem, as we define the Network-Constrained Packing (NCP)problem of finding the optimal mapping of brokered resources to applications with guaranteed performance predictability. We prove that NCP is NP-hard, and we define two special instances of the problem, for which exact solutions can be found efficiently. We develop a greedy heuristic to solve the general instance of the NCP problem, and we evaluate its efficiency using simulations on various application workloads, and network models.This work is supported by NSF CISE CNS Award #1347522, # 1239021, # 1012798
Performance-oriented Cloud Provisioning: Taxonomy and Survey
Cloud computing is being viewed as the technology of today and the future.
Through this paradigm, the customers gain access to shared computing resources
located in remote data centers that are hosted by cloud providers (CP). This
technology allows for provisioning of various resources such as virtual
machines (VM), physical machines, processors, memory, network, storage and
software as per the needs of customers. Application providers (AP), who are
customers of the CP, deploy applications on the cloud infrastructure and then
these applications are used by the end-users. To meet the fluctuating
application workload demands, dynamic provisioning is essential and this
article provides a detailed literature survey of dynamic provisioning within
cloud systems with focus on application performance. The well-known types of
provisioning and the associated problems are clearly and pictorially explained
and the provisioning terminology is clarified. A very detailed and general
cloud provisioning classification is presented, which views provisioning from
different perspectives, aiding in understanding the process inside-out. Cloud
dynamic provisioning is explained by considering resources, stakeholders,
techniques, technologies, algorithms, problems, goals and more.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
On the Optimality of Virtualized Security Function Placement in Multi-Tenant Data Centers
Security and service protection against cyber attacks remain among the primary challenges for virtualized, multi-tenant Data Centres (DCs), for reasons that vary from lack of resource isolation to the monolithic nature of legacy middleboxes. Although security is currently considered a property of the underlying infrastructure, diverse services require protection against different threats and at timescales which are on par with those of service deployment and elastic resource provisioning. We address the resource allocation problem of deploying customised security services over a virtualized, multi-tenant DC. We formulate the problem in Integral Linear Programming (ILP) as an instance of the NP-hard variable size variable cost bin packing problem with the objective of maximising the residual resources after allocation. We propose a modified version of the Best Fit Decreasing algorithm (BFD) to solve the problem in polynomial time and we show that BFD optimises the objective function up to 80% more than other algorithms
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
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