5,607 research outputs found
Joint Energy Efficient and QoS-aware Path Allocation and VNF Placement for Service Function Chaining
Service Function Chaining (SFC) allows the forwarding of a traffic flow along
a chain of Virtual Network Functions (VNFs, e.g., IDS, firewall, and NAT).
Software Defined Networking (SDN) solutions can be used to support SFC reducing
the management complexity and the operational costs. One of the most critical
issues for the service and network providers is the reduction of energy
consumption, which should be achieved without impact to the quality of
services. In this paper, we propose a novel resource (re)allocation
architecture which enables energy-aware SFC for SDN-based networks. To this
end, we model the problems of VNF placement, allocation of VNFs to flows, and
flow routing as optimization problems. Thereafter, heuristic algorithms are
proposed for the different optimization problems, in order find near-optimal
solutions in acceptable times. The performance of the proposed algorithms are
numerically evaluated over a real-world topology and various network traffic
patterns. The results confirm that the proposed heuristic algorithms provide
near optimal solutions while their execution time is applicable for real-life
networks.Comment: Extended version of submitted paper - v7 - July 201
Practical service placement approach for microservices architecture
Community networks (CNs) have gained momentum in the last few years with the increasing number of spontaneously deployed WiFi hotspots and home networks. These networks, owned and managed by volunteers, offer various services to their members and to the public. To reduce the complexity of service deployment, community micro-clouds have recently emerged as a promising enabler for the delivery of cloud services to community users. By putting services closer to consumers, micro-clouds pursue not only a better service performance, but also a low entry barrier for the deployment of mainstream Internet services within the CN. Unfortunately, the provisioning of the services is not so simple. Due to the large and irregular topology, high software and hardware diversity of CNs, it requires of aPeer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Cloud computing resource scheduling and a survey of its evolutionary approaches
A disruptive technology fundamentally transforming the way that computing services are delivered, cloud computing offers information and communication technology users a new dimension of convenience of resources, as services via the Internet. Because cloud provides a finite pool of virtualized on-demand resources, optimally scheduling them has become an essential and rewarding topic, where a trend of using Evolutionary Computation (EC) algorithms is emerging rapidly. Through analyzing the cloud computing architecture, this survey first presents taxonomy at two levels of scheduling cloud resources. It then paints a landscape of the scheduling problem and solutions. According to the taxonomy, a comprehensive survey of state-of-the-art approaches is presented systematically. Looking forward, challenges and potential future research directions are investigated and invited, including real-time scheduling, adaptive dynamic scheduling, large-scale scheduling, multiobjective scheduling, and distributed and parallel scheduling. At the dawn of Industry 4.0, cloud computing scheduling for cyber-physical integration with the presence of big data is also discussed. Research in this area is only in its infancy, but with the rapid fusion of information and data technology, more exciting and agenda-setting topics are likely to emerge on the horizon
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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