8,251 research outputs found

    A Simulated Annealing Method to Cover Dynamic Load Balancing in Grid Environment

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    High-performance scheduling is critical to the achievement of application performance on the computational grid. New scheduling algorithms are in demand for addressing new concerns arising in the grid environment. One of the main phases of scheduling on a grid is related to the load balancing problem therefore having a high-performance method to deal with the load balancing problem is essential to obtain a satisfactory high-performance scheduling. This paper presents SAGE, a new high-performance method to cover the dynamic load balancing problem by means of a simulated annealing algorithm. Even though this problem has been addressed with several different approaches only one of these methods is related with simulated annealing algorithm. Preliminary results show that SAGE not only makes it possible to find a good solution to the problem (effectiveness) but also in a reasonable amount of time (efficiency)

    Hybrid ant colony system and genetic algorithm approach for scheduling of jobs in computational grid

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    Metaheuristic algorithms have been used to solve scheduling problems in grid computing.However, stand-alone metaheuristic algorithms do not always show good performance in every problem instance. This study proposes a high level hybrid approach between ant colony system and genetic algorithm for job scheduling in grid computing.The proposed approach is based on a high level hybridization.The proposed hybrid approach is evaluated using the static benchmark problems known as ETC matrix.Experimental results show that the proposed hybridization between the two algorithms outperforms the stand-alone algorithms in terms of best and average makespan values

    A Case for Cooperative and Incentive-Based Coupling of Distributed Clusters

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    Research interest in Grid computing has grown significantly over the past five years. Management of distributed resources is one of the key issues in Grid computing. Central to management of resources is the effectiveness of resource allocation as it determines the overall utility of the system. The current approaches to superscheduling in a grid environment are non-coordinated since application level schedulers or brokers make scheduling decisions independently of the others in the system. Clearly, this can exacerbate the load sharing and utilization problems of distributed resources due to suboptimal schedules that are likely to occur. To overcome these limitations, we propose a mechanism for coordinated sharing of distributed clusters based on computational economy. The resulting environment, called \emph{Grid-Federation}, allows the transparent use of resources from the federation when local resources are insufficient to meet its users' requirements. The use of computational economy methodology in coordinating resource allocation not only facilitates the QoS based scheduling, but also enhances utility delivered by resources.Comment: 22 pages, extended version of the conference paper published at IEEE Cluster'05, Boston, M

    APPROACH FOR RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN GRID ENVIRONMENTS USING GENETIC ALGORITHM

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    Resource Management in Grid Computing: A Review

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    A Network Computing System is a virtual computer formed by a networked set of heterogeneous machines that agree to share their local resources with each other. A grid is a very large scale network computing system that scales to internet size environments with machines distributed across multiple organizationsand administrative domains. The resource management system is the central component of grid computing system. Resources in the grid are distributed, heterogeneous, autonomous and unpredictable. A resource management system matches requests to resources, schedules the matched resources, and executes the requests using scheduled resources. Scheduling in the grid environment depends upon the characteristics of the tasks, machines and network connectivity. The paper provides a brief overview of resource management in grid computing considering important factors such as types of resource management in grid computing, resource management models and comparison of various scheduling algorithm in resource management in grid computing

    DESIGN AND EVALUATION OF RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND JOB SCHEDULING ALGORITHMS ON COMPUTATIONAL GRIDS

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    Grid, an infrastructure for resource sharing, currently has shown its importance in many scientific applications requiring tremendously high computational power. Grid computing enables sharing, selection and aggregation of resources for solving complex and large-scale scientific problems. Grids computing, whose resources are distributed, heterogeneous and dynamic in nature, introduces a number of fascinating issues in resource management. Grid scheduling is the key issue in grid environment in which its system must meet the functional requirements of heterogeneous domains, which are sometimes conflicting in nature also, like user, application, and network. Moreover, the system must satisfy non-functional requirements like reliability, efficiency, performance, effective resource utilization, and scalability. Thus, overall aim of this research is to introduce new grid scheduling algorithms for resource allocation as well as for job scheduling for enabling a highly efficient and effective utilization of the resources in executing various applications. The four prime aspects of this work are: firstly, a model of the grid scheduling problem for dynamic grid computing environment; secondly, development of a new web based simulator (SyedWSim), enabling the grid users to conduct a statistical analysis of grid workload traces and provides a realistic basis for experimentation in resource allocation and job scheduling algorithms on a grid; thirdly, proposal of a new grid resource allocation method of optimal computational cost using synthetic and real workload traces with respect to other allocation methods; and finally, proposal of some new job scheduling algorithms of optimal performance considering parameters like waiting time, turnaround time, response time, bounded slowdown, completion time and stretch time. The issue is not only to develop new algorithms, but also to evaluate them on an experimental computational grid, using synthetic and real workload traces, along with the other existing job scheduling algorithms. Experimental evaluation confirmed that the proposed grid scheduling algorithms possess a high degree of optimality in performance, efficiency and scalability
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