15 research outputs found

    Efficient Load Balancing for Cloud Computing by Using Content Analysis

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    Nowadays, computer networks have grown rapidly due to the demand for information technology management and facilitation of greater functionality. The service provided based on a single machine cannot accommodate large databases. Therefore, single servers must be combined for server group services. The problem in grouping server service is that it is very hard to manage many devices which have different hardware. Cloud computing is an extensive scalable computing infrastructure that shares existing resources. It is a popular option for people and businesses for a number of reasons including cost savings and security. This paper aimed to propose an efficient technique of load balance control by using HA Proxy in cloud computing with the objective of receiving and distributing the workload to the computer server to share the processing resources. The proposed technique applied round-robin scheduling for an efficient resource management of the cloud storage systems that focused on an effective workload balancing and a dynamic replication strategy. The evaluation approach was based on the benchmark data from requests per second and failed requests. The results showed that the proposed technique could improve performance of load balancing by 1,000 request /6.31 sec in cloud computing and generate fewer false alarm

    REQUIREMENT- AWARE STRATEGIES FOR SCHEDULING MULTIPLE DIVISIBLE LOADS IN CLUSTER ENVIRONMENTS

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Multi-GPU support on the marrow algorithmic skeleton framework

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    Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Engenharia InformáticaWith the proliferation of general purpose GPUs, workload parallelization and datatransfer optimization became an increasing concern. The natural evolution from using a single GPU, is multiplying the amount of available processors, presenting new challenges, as tuning the workload decompositions and load balancing, when dealing with heterogeneous systems. Higher-level programming is a very important asset in a multi-GPU environment, due to the complexity inherent to the currently used GPGPU APIs (OpenCL and CUDA), because of their low-level and code overhead. This can be obtained by introducing an abstraction layer, which has the advantage of enabling implicit optimizations and orchestrations such as transparent load balancing mechanism and reduced explicit code overhead. Algorithmic Skeletons, previously used in cluster environments, have recently been adapted to the GPGPU context. Skeletons abstract most sources of code overhead, by defining computation patterns of commonly used algorithms. The Marrow algorithmic skeleton library is one of these, taking advantage of the abstractions to automate the orchestration needed for an efficient GPU execution. This thesis proposes the extension of Marrow to leverage the use of algorithmic skeletons in the modular and efficient programming of multiple heterogeneous GPUs, within a single machine. We were able to achieve a good balance between simplicity of the programming model and performance, obtaining good scalability when using multiple GPUs, with an efficient load distribution, although at the price of some overhead when using a single-GPU.projects PTDC/EIA-EIA/102579/2008 and PTDC/EIA-EIA/111518/200

    On the role of performance interference in consolidated environments

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    Cotutela Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya i KTH Royal Institute of TechnologyWith the advent of resource shared environments such as the Cloud, virtualization has become the de facto standard for server consolidation. While consolidation improves utilization, it causes performance-interference between Virtual Machines (VMs) from contention in shared resources such as CPU, Last Level Cache (LLC) and memory bandwidth. Over-provisioning resources for performance sensitive applications can guarantee Quality of Service (QoS), however, it results in low machine utilization. Thus, assuring QoS for performance sensitive applications while allowing co-location has been a challenging problem. In this thesis, we identify ways to mitigate performance interference without undue over-provisioning and also point out the need to model and account for performance interference to improve the reliability and accuracy of elastic scaling. The end goal of this research is to leverage on the observations to provide efficient resource management that is both performance and cost aware. Our main contributions are threefold; first, we improve the overall machine utilization by executing best-e↵ort applications along side latency critical applications without violating its performance requirements. Our solution is able to dynamically adapt and leverage on the changing workload/phase behaviour to execute best-e↵ort applications without causing excessive interference on performance; second, we identify that certain performance metrics used for elastic scaling decisions may become unreliable if performance interference is unaccounted. By modelling performance interference, we show that these performance metrics become reliable in a multi-tenant environment; and third, we identify and demonstrate the impact of interference on the accuracy of elastic scaling and propose a solution to significantly minimise performance violations at a reduced cost.Con la aparición de entornos con recurso compartidos tales como la nube, la virtualización se ha convertido en el estándar de facto para la consolidación de servidores. Mientras que la consolidación mejora la utilización, también causa interferencia en el rendimiento de las máquinas virtuales (VM) debido a la contención en recursos compartidos, tales como CPU, el último nivel de cache (LLC) y el ancho de banda de memoria. El exceso de aprovisionamiento de recursos para aplicaciones sensibles al rendimiento puede garantizar la calidad de servicio (QoS), sin embargo, resulta en una baja utilización de la maquina. Por lo tanto, asegurar QoS en aplicaciones sensibles al rendimiento, al tiempo que permitir la co-localización ha sido un problema difícil. En esta tesis, se identifican las formas de mitigar la interferencia sin necesidad de sobre-aprovisionamiento y también se señala la necesidad de modelar y contabilizar la interferencia en el desempeño para mejorar la fiabilidad y la precisión del escalado elástico. El objetivo final de esta investigación consiste en aprovechar las observaciones para proporcionar una gestión eficiente de los recursos considerando tanto el rendimiento como el coste. Nuestras contribuciones principales son tres; primero, mejoramos la utilización total de la maquina mediante la ejecución de aplicaciones best-effort junto con aplicaciones críticas en latencia sin vulnerar sus requisitos de rendimiento. Nuestra solución es capaz de adaptarse de forma dinámica y sacar provecho del comportamiento cambiante de la carga de trabajo y sus cambios de fase para ejecutar aplicaciones best-effort, sin causar interferencia excesiva en el rendimiento; segundo, identificamos que ciertos parámetros de rendimiento utilizados para las decisiones de escalado elástico pueden no ser fiables si no se tiene en cuenta la interferencia en el rendimiento. Al modelar la interferencia en el rendimiento, se muestra que estas métricas de rendimiento resultan fiables en un entorno multi-proveedor; y tercero, se identifica y muestra el impacto de la interferencia en la precisión del escalado elástico y se propone una solución para minimizar significativamente vulneraciones de rendimiento con un coste reducido.Postprint (published version

    Parallel and Distributed Computing

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    The 14 chapters presented in this book cover a wide variety of representative works ranging from hardware design to application development. Particularly, the topics that are addressed are programmable and reconfigurable devices and systems, dependability of GPUs (General Purpose Units), network topologies, cache coherence protocols, resource allocation, scheduling algorithms, peertopeer networks, largescale network simulation, and parallel routines and algorithms. In this way, the articles included in this book constitute an excellent reference for engineers and researchers who have particular interests in each of these topics in parallel and distributed computing

    Scalable Task Schedulers for Many-Core Architectures

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    This thesis develops schedulers for many-cores with different optimization objectives. The proposed schedulers are designed to be scale up as the number of cores in many-cores increase while continuing to provide guarantees on the quality of the schedule

    Just-in-time Analytics Over Heterogeneous Data and Hardware

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    Industry and academia are continuously becoming more data-driven and data-intensive, relying on the analysis of a wide variety of datasets to gain insights. At the same time, data variety increases continuously across multiple axes. First, data comes in multiple formats, such as the binary tabular data of a DBMS, raw textual files, and domain-specific formats. Second, different datasets follow different data models, such as the relational and the hierarchical one. Data location also varies: Some datasets reside in a central "data lake", whereas others lie in remote data sources. In addition, users execute widely different analysis tasks over all these data types. Finally, the process of gathering and integrating diverse datasets introduces several inconsistencies and redundancies in the data, such as duplicate entries for the same real-world concept. In summary, heterogeneity significantly affects the way data analysis is performed. In this thesis, we aim for data virtualization: Abstracting data out of its original form and manipulating it regardless of the way it is stored or structured, without a performance penalty. To achieve data virtualization, we design and implement systems that i) mask heterogeneity through the use of heterogeneity-aware, high-level building blocks and ii) offer fast responses through on-demand adaptation techniques. Regarding the high-level building blocks, we use a query language and algebra to handle multiple collection types, such as relations and hierarchies, express transformations between these collection types, as well as express complex data cleaning tasks over them. In addition, we design a location-aware compiler and optimizer that masks away the complexity of accessing multiple remote data sources. Regarding on-demand adaptation, we present a design to produce a new system per query. The design uses customization mechanisms that trigger runtime code generation to mimic the system most appropriate to answer a query fast: Query operators are thus created based on the query workload and the underlying data models; the data access layer is created based on the underlying data formats. In addition, we exploit emerging hardware by customizing the system implementation based on the available heterogeneous processors â CPUs and GPGPUs. We thus pair each workload with its ideal processor type. The end result is a just-in-time database system that is specific to the query, data, workload, and hardware instance. This thesis redesigns the data management stack to natively cater for data heterogeneity and exploit hardware heterogeneity. Instead of centralizing all relevant datasets, converting them to a single representation, and loading them in a monolithic, static, suboptimal system, our design embraces heterogeneity. Overall, our design decouples the type of performed analysis from the original data layout; users can perform their analysis across data stores, data models, and data formats, but at the same time experience the performance offered by a custom system that has been built on demand to serve their specific use case

    Software Defined Application Delivery Networking

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    In this thesis we present the architecture, design, and prototype implementation details of AppFabric. AppFabric is a next generation application delivery platform for easily creating, managing and controlling massively distributed and very dynamic application deployments that may span multiple datacenters. Over the last few years, the need for more flexibility, finer control, and automatic management of large (and messy) datacenters has stimulated technologies for virtualizing the infrastructure components and placing them under software-based management and control; generically called Software-defined Infrastructure (SDI). However, current applications are not designed to leverage this dynamism and flexibility offered by SDI and they mostly depend on a mix of different techniques including manual configuration, specialized appliances (middleboxes), and (mostly) proprietary middleware solutions together with a team of extremely conscientious and talented system engineers to get their applications deployed and running. AppFabric, 1) automates the whole control and management stack of application deployment and delivery, 2) allows application architects to define logical workflows consisting of application servers, message-level middleboxes, packet-level middleboxes and network services (both, local and wide-area) composed over application-level routing policies, and 3) provides the abstraction of an application cloud that allows the application to dynamically (and automatically) expand and shrink its distributed footprint across multiple geographically distributed datacenters operated by different cloud providers. The architecture consists of a hierarchical control plane system called Lighthouse and a fully distributed data plane design (with no special hardware components such as service orchestrators, load balancers, message brokers, etc.) called OpenADN . The current implementation (under active development) consists of ~10000 lines of python and C code. AppFabric will allow applications to fully leverage the opportunities provided by modern virtualized Software-Defined Infrastructures. It will serve as the platform for deploying massively distributed, and extremely dynamic next generation application use-cases, including: Internet-of-Things/Cyber-Physical Systems: Through support for managing distributed gather-aggregate topologies common to most Internet-of-Things(IoT) and Cyber-Physical Systems(CPS) use-cases. By their very nature, IoT and CPS use cases are massively distributed and have different levels of computation and storage requirements at different locations. Also, they have variable latency requirements for their different distributed sites. Some services, such as device controllers, in an Iot/CPS application workflow may need to gather, process and forward data under near-real time constraints and hence need to be as close to the device as possible. Other services may need more computation to process aggregated data to drive long term business intelligence functions. AppFabric has been designed to provide support for such very dynamic, highly diversified and massively distributed application use-cases. Network Function Virtualization: Through support for heterogeneous workflows, application-aware networking, and network-aware application deployments, AppFabric will enable new partnerships between Application Service Providers (ASPs) and Network Service Providers (NSPs). An application workflow in AppFabric may comprise of application services, packet and message-level middleboxes, and network transport services chained together over an application-level routing substrate. The Application-level routing substrate allows policy-based service chaining where the application may specify policies for routing their application traffic over different services based on application-level content or context. Virtual worlds/multiplayer games: Through support for creating, managing and controlling dynamic and distributed application clouds needed by these applications. AppFabric allows the application to easily specify policies to dynamically grow and shrink the application\u27s footprint over different geographical sites, on-demand. Mobile Apps: Through support for extremely diversified and very dynamic application contexts typical of such applications. Also, AppFabric provides support for automatically managing massively distributed service deployment and controlling application traffic based on application-level policies. This allows mobile applications to provide the best Quality-of-Experience to its users without This thesis is the first to handle and provide a complete solution for such a complex and relevant architectural problem that is expected to touch each of our lives by enabling exciting new application use-cases that are not possible today. Also, AppFabric is a non-proprietary platform that is expected to spawn lots of innovations both in the design of the platform itself and the features it provides to applications. AppFabric still needs many iterations, both in terms of design and implementation maturity. This thesis is not the end of journey for AppFabric but rather just the beginning

    From cluster databases to cloud storage: Providing transactional support on the cloud

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    Durant les últimes tres dècades, les limitacions tecnològiques (com per exemple la capacitat dels dispositius d'emmagatzematge o l'ample de banda de les xarxes de comunicació) i les creixents demandes dels usuaris (estructures d'informació, volums de dades) han conduït l'evolució de les bases de dades distribuïdes. Des dels primers repositoris de dades per arxius plans que es van desenvolupar en la dècada dels vuitanta, s'han produït importants avenços en els algoritmes de control de concurrència, protocols de replicació i en la gestió de transaccions. No obstant això, els reptes moderns d'emmagatzematge de dades que plantegen el Big Data i el cloud computing—orientats a millorar la limitacions pel que fa a escalabilitat i elasticitat de les bases de dades estàtiques—estan empenyent als professionals a relaxar algunes propietats importants dels sistemes transaccionals clàssics, cosa que exclou a diverses aplicacions les quals no poden encaixar en aquesta estratègia degut a la seva alta dependència transaccional. El propòsit d'aquesta tesi és abordar dos reptes importants encara latents en el camp de les bases de dades distribuïdes: (1) les limitacions pel que fa a escalabilitat dels sistemes transaccionals i (2) el suport transaccional en repositoris d'emmagatzematge en el núvol. Analitzar les tècniques tradicionals de control de concurrència i de replicació, utilitzades per les bases de dades clàssiques per suportar transaccions, és fonamental per identificar les raons que fan que aquests sistemes degradin el seu rendiment quan el nombre de nodes i / o quantitat de dades creix. A més, aquest anàlisi està orientat a justificar el disseny dels repositoris en el núvol que deliberadament han deixat de banda el suport transaccional. Efectivament, apropar el paradigma de l'emmagatzematge en el núvol a les aplicacions que tenen una forta dependència en les transaccions és fonamental per a la seva adaptació als requeriments actuals pel que fa a volums de dades i models de negoci. Aquesta tesi comença amb la proposta d'un simulador de protocols per a bases de dades distribuïdes estàtiques, el qual serveix com a base per a la revisió i comparativa de rendiment dels protocols de control de concurrència i les tècniques de replicació existents. Pel que fa a la escalabilitat de les bases de dades i les transaccions, s'estudien els efectes que té executar diferents perfils de transacció sota diferents condicions. Aquesta anàlisi contínua amb una revisió dels repositoris d'emmagatzematge de dades en el núvol existents—que prometen encaixar en entorns dinàmics que requereixen alta escalabilitat i disponibilitat—, el qual permet avaluar els paràmetres i característiques que aquests sistemes han sacrificat per tal de complir les necessitats actuals pel que fa a emmagatzematge de dades a gran escala. Per explorar les possibilitats que ofereix el paradigma del cloud computing en un escenari real, es presenta el desenvolupament d'una arquitectura d'emmagatzematge de dades inspirada en el cloud computing la qual s’utilitza per emmagatzemar la informació generada en les Smart Grids. Concretament, es combinen les tècniques de replicació en bases de dades transaccionals i la propagació epidèmica amb els principis de disseny usats per construir els repositoris de dades en el núvol. Les lliçons recollides en l'estudi dels protocols de replicació i control de concurrència en el simulador de base de dades, juntament amb les experiències derivades del desenvolupament del repositori de dades per a les Smart Grids, desemboquen en el que hem batejat com Epidemia: una infraestructura d'emmagatzematge per Big Data concebuda per proporcionar suport transaccional en el núvol. A més d'heretar els beneficis dels repositoris en el núvol en quant a escalabilitat, Epidemia inclou una capa de gestió de transaccions que reenvia les transaccions dels clients a un conjunt jeràrquic de particions de dades, cosa que permet al sistema oferir diferents nivells de consistència i adaptar elàsticament la seva configuració a noves demandes de càrrega de treball. Finalment, els resultats experimentals posen de manifest la viabilitat de la nostra contribució i encoratgen als professionals a continuar treballant en aquesta àrea.Durante las últimas tres décadas, las limitaciones tecnológicas (por ejemplo la capacidad de los dispositivos de almacenamiento o el ancho de banda de las redes de comunicación) y las crecientes demandas de los usuarios (estructuras de información, volúmenes de datos) han conducido la evolución de las bases de datos distribuidas. Desde los primeros repositorios de datos para archivos planos que se desarrollaron en la década de los ochenta, se han producido importantes avances en los algoritmos de control de concurrencia, protocolos de replicación y en la gestión de transacciones. Sin embargo, los retos modernos de almacenamiento de datos que plantean el Big Data y el cloud computing—orientados a mejorar la limitaciones en cuanto a escalabilidad y elasticidad de las bases de datos estáticas—están empujando a los profesionales a relajar algunas propiedades importantes de los sistemas transaccionales clásicos, lo que excluye a varias aplicaciones las cuales no pueden encajar en esta estrategia debido a su alta dependencia transaccional. El propósito de esta tesis es abordar dos retos importantes todavía latentes en el campo de las bases de datos distribuidas: (1) las limitaciones en cuanto a escalabilidad de los sistemas transaccionales y (2) el soporte transaccional en repositorios de almacenamiento en la nube. Analizar las técnicas tradicionales de control de concurrencia y de replicación, utilizadas por las bases de datos clásicas para soportar transacciones, es fundamental para identificar las razones que hacen que estos sistemas degraden su rendimiento cuando el número de nodos y/o cantidad de datos crece. Además, este análisis está orientado a justificar el diseño de los repositorios en la nube que deliberadamente han dejado de lado el soporte transaccional. Efectivamente, acercar el paradigma del almacenamiento en la nube a las aplicaciones que tienen una fuerte dependencia en las transacciones es crucial para su adaptación a los requerimientos actuales en cuanto a volúmenes de datos y modelos de negocio. Esta tesis empieza con la propuesta de un simulador de protocolos para bases de datos distribuidas estáticas, el cual sirve como base para la revisión y comparativa de rendimiento de los protocolos de control de concurrencia y las técnicas de replicación existentes. En cuanto a la escalabilidad de las bases de datos y las transacciones, se estudian los efectos que tiene ejecutar distintos perfiles de transacción bajo diferentes condiciones. Este análisis continua con una revisión de los repositorios de almacenamiento en la nube existentes—que prometen encajar en entornos dinámicos que requieren alta escalabilidad y disponibilidad—, el cual permite evaluar los parámetros y características que estos sistemas han sacrificado con el fin de cumplir las necesidades actuales en cuanto a almacenamiento de datos a gran escala. Para explorar las posibilidades que ofrece el paradigma del cloud computing en un escenario real, se presenta el desarrollo de una arquitectura de almacenamiento de datos inspirada en el cloud computing para almacenar la información generada en las Smart Grids. Concretamente, se combinan las técnicas de replicación en bases de datos transaccionales y la propagación epidémica con los principios de diseño usados para construir los repositorios de datos en la nube. Las lecciones recogidas en el estudio de los protocolos de replicación y control de concurrencia en el simulador de base de datos, junto con las experiencias derivadas del desarrollo del repositorio de datos para las Smart Grids, desembocan en lo que hemos acuñado como Epidemia: una infraestructura de almacenamiento para Big Data concebida para proporcionar soporte transaccional en la nube. Además de heredar los beneficios de los repositorios en la nube altamente en cuanto a escalabilidad, Epidemia incluye una capa de gestión de transacciones que reenvía las transacciones de los clientes a un conjunto jerárquico de particiones de datos, lo que permite al sistema ofrecer distintos niveles de consistencia y adaptar elásticamente su configuración a nuevas demandas cargas de trabajo. Por último, los resultados experimentales ponen de manifiesto la viabilidad de nuestra contribución y alientan a los profesionales a continuar trabajando en esta área.Over the past three decades, technology constraints (e.g., capacity of storage devices, communication networks bandwidth) and an ever-increasing set of user demands (e.g., information structures, data volumes) have driven the evolution of distributed databases. Since flat-file data repositories developed in the early eighties, there have been important advances in concurrency control algorithms, replication protocols, and transactions management. However, modern concerns in data storage posed by Big Data and cloud computing—related to overcome the scalability and elasticity limitations of classic databases—are pushing practitioners to relax some important properties featured by transactions, which excludes several applications that are unable to fit in this strategy due to their intrinsic transactional nature. The purpose of this thesis is to address two important challenges still latent in distributed databases: (1) the scalability limitations of transactional databases and (2) providing transactional support on cloud-based storage repositories. Analyzing the traditional concurrency control and replication techniques, used by classic databases to support transactions, is critical to identify the reasons that make these systems degrade their throughput when the number of nodes and/or amount of data rockets. Besides, this analysis is devoted to justify the design rationale behind cloud repositories in which transactions have been generally neglected. Furthermore, enabling applications which are strongly dependent on transactions to take advantage of the cloud storage paradigm is crucial for their adaptation to current data demands and business models. This dissertation starts by proposing a custom protocol simulator for static distributed databases, which serves as a basis for revising and comparing the performance of existing concurrency control protocols and replication techniques. As this thesis is especially concerned with transactions, the effects on the database scalability of different transaction profiles under different conditions are studied. This analysis is followed by a review of existing cloud storage repositories—that claim to be highly dynamic, scalable, and available—, which leads to an evaluation of the parameters and features that these systems have sacrificed in order to meet current large-scale data storage demands. To further explore the possibilities of the cloud computing paradigm in a real-world scenario, a cloud-inspired approach to store data from Smart Grids is presented. More specifically, the proposed architecture combines classic database replication techniques and epidemic updates propagation with the design principles of cloud-based storage. The key insights collected when prototyping the replication and concurrency control protocols at the database simulator, together with the experiences derived from building a large-scale storage repository for Smart Grids, are wrapped up into what we have coined as Epidemia: a storage infrastructure conceived to provide transactional support on the cloud. In addition to inheriting the benefits of highly-scalable cloud repositories, Epidemia includes a transaction management layer that forwards client transactions to a hierarchical set of data partitions, which allows the system to offer different consistency levels and elastically adapt its configuration to incoming workloads. Finally, experimental results highlight the feasibility of our contribution and encourage practitioners to further research in this area
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