1,640 research outputs found

    Green-Aware Virtual Machine Migration Strategy in Sustainable Cloud Computing Environments

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    As cloud computing develops rapidly, the energy consumption of large-scale datacenters becomes unneglectable, and thus renewable energy is considered as the extra supply for building sustainable cloud infrastructures. In this chapter, we present a green-aware virtual machine (VM) migration strategy in such datacenters powered by sustainable energy sources, considering the power consumption of both IT functional devices and cooling devices. We define an overall optimization problem from an energy-aware point of view and try to solve it using statistical searching approaches. The purpose is to utilize green energy sufficiently while guaranteeing the performance of applications hosted by the datacenter. Evaluation experiments are conducted under realistic workload traces and solar energy generation data in order to validate the feasibility. Results show that the green energy utilization increases remarkably, and more overall revenues could be achieved

    On Allocation Policies for Power and Performance

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    With the increasing popularity of Internet-based services and applications, power efficiency is becoming a major concern for data center operators, as high electricity consumption not only increases greenhouse gas emissions, but also increases the cost of running the server farm itself. In this paper we address the problem of maximizing the revenue of a service provider by means of dynamic allocation policies that run the minimum amount of servers necessary to meet user's requirements in terms of performance. The results of several experiments executed using Wikipedia traces are described, showing that the proposed schemes work well, even if the workload is non-stationary. Since any resource allocation policy requires the use of forecasting mechanisms, various schemes allowing compensating errors in the load forecasts are presented and evaluated.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, 2010 11th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Grid Computing (GRID), pp 313 - 320 (E2GC2-2010 workshop

    Climbing Up Cloud Nine: Performance Enhancement Techniques for Cloud Computing Environments

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    With the transformation of cloud computing technologies from an attractive trend to a business reality, the need is more pressing than ever for efficient cloud service management tools and techniques. As cloud technologies continue to mature, the service model, resource allocation methodologies, energy efficiency models and general service management schemes are not yet saturated. The burden of making this all tick perfectly falls on cloud providers. Surely, economy of scale revenues and leveraging existing infrastructure and giant workforce are there as positives, but it is far from straightforward operation from that point. Performance and service delivery will still depend on the providers’ algorithms and policies which affect all operational areas. With that in mind, this thesis tackles a set of the more critical challenges faced by cloud providers with the purpose of enhancing cloud service performance and saving on providers’ cost. This is done by exploring innovative resource allocation techniques and developing novel tools and methodologies in the context of cloud resource management, power efficiency, high availability and solution evaluation. Optimal and suboptimal solutions to the resource allocation problem in cloud data centers from both the computational and the network sides are proposed. Next, a deep dive into the energy efficiency challenge in cloud data centers is presented. Consolidation-based and non-consolidation-based solutions containing a novel dynamic virtual machine idleness prediction technique are proposed and evaluated. An investigation of the problem of simulating cloud environments follows. Available simulation solutions are comprehensively evaluated and a novel design framework for cloud simulators covering multiple variations of the problem is presented. Moreover, the challenge of evaluating cloud resource management solutions performance in terms of high availability is addressed. An extensive framework is introduced to design high availability-aware cloud simulators and a prominent cloud simulator (GreenCloud) is extended to implement it. Finally, real cloud application scenarios evaluation is demonstrated using the new tool. The primary argument made in this thesis is that the proposed resource allocation and simulation techniques can serve as basis for effective solutions that mitigate performance and cost challenges faced by cloud providers pertaining to resource utilization, energy efficiency, and client satisfaction

    Optimizing Cloud-Service Performance: Efficient Resource Provisioning Via Optimal Workload Allocation

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    Cloud computing is being widely accepted and utilized in the business world. From the perspective of businesses utilizing the cloud, it is critical to meet their customers\u27 requirements by achieving service-level-objectives. Hence, the ability to accurately characterize and optimize cloud-service performance is of great importance. In this dissertation, a stochastic multi-tenant framework is proposed to model the service of customer requests in a cloud infrastructure composed of heterogeneous virtual machines (VMs). The proposed framework addresses the critical concepts and characteristics in the cloud, including virtualization, multi-tenancy, heterogeneity of VMs, VM isolation for the purpose of security and/or performance guarantee and the stochastic response time of a customer request. Two cloud-service performance metrics are mathematically characterized, namely the percentile of the stochastic response time and the mean of the stochastic response time of a customer request. Based upon the proposed multi-tenant framework, a workload-allocation algorithm, termed max-min-cloud algorithm, is then devised to optimize the performance of the cloud service. A rigorous optimality proof of the max-min-cloud algorithm is given when the stochastic response time of a customer request assumed exponentially distributed. Furthermore, extensive Monte-Carlo simulations are conducted to validate the optimality of the max-min-cloud algorithm by comparing with other two workload-allocation algorithms under various scenarios. Next, the resource provisioning problem in the cloud is studied in light of the max-min-cloud algorithm. In particular, an efficient resource-provisioning strategy, termed the MPC strategy, is proposed for serving dynamically arriving customer requests. The efficacy of the MPC strategy is verified through two practical cases when the arrival of the customer requests is predictable and unpredictable, respectively. As an extension of the max-min-cloud algorithm, we further devise the max-load-first algorithm to deal with the VM placement problem in the cloud. MC simulation results show that the max-load-first VM-placement algorithm outperforms the other two heuristic algorithms in terms of reducing the mean of stochastic completion time of a group of arbitrary customers\u27 requests. Simulation results also provide insight on how the initial loads of servers affect the performance of the cloud system. In summary, the findings in this dissertation work can be of great benefit to both service providers (namely business owners) and cloud providers. For business owners, the max-min-cloud workload-allocation algorithm and the MPC resource-provisioning strategy together can be used help them build a better understanding of how much virtual resources in the cloud they may need to meet customers\u27 expectations subject to cost constraints. For cloud providers, the max-load-first VM-placement algorithm can be used to optimize the computational performance of the service by appropriately utilizing the physical machines and efficiently placing the VMs in their cloud infrastructures

    Efficient Hybrid Genetic Based Multi Dimensional Host Load Aware Algorithm for Scheduling and Optimization of Virtual Machines

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    Mapping the virtual machines to the physical machines cluster is called the VM placement. Placing the VM in the appropriate host is necessary for ensuring the effective resource utilization and minimizing the datacenter cost as well as power. Here we present an efficient hybrid genetic based host load aware algorithm for scheduling and optimization of virtual machines in a cluster of Physical hosts. We developed the algorithm based on two different methods, first initial VM packing is done by checking the load of the physical host and the user constraints of the VMs. Second optimization of placed VMs is done by using a hybrid genetic algorithm based on fitness function. Our simulation results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms existing methods and enhances the rate of resource utilization through accommodating more number of virtual machines in a physical hos

    Efficient Hybrid Genetic Based Multi Dimensional Host Load Aware Algorithm for Scheduling and Optimization of Virtual Machines

    Get PDF
    Mapping the virtual machines to the physical machines cluster is called the VM placement. Placing the VM in the appropriate host is necessary for ensuring the effective resource utilization and minimizing the datacenter cost as well as power. Here we present an efficient hybrid genetic based host load aware algorithm for scheduling and optimization of virtual machines in a cluster of Physical hosts. We developed the algorithm based on two different methods, first initial VM packing is done by checking the load of the physical host and the user constraints of the VMs. Second optimization of placed VMs is done by using a hybrid genetic algorithm based on fitness function. Our simulation results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms existing methods and enhances the rate of resource utilization through accommodating more number of virtual machines in a physical hos
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