6,352 research outputs found
Energy-Efficient Management of Data Center Resources for Cloud Computing: A Vision, Architectural Elements, and Open Challenges
Cloud computing is offering utility-oriented IT services to users worldwide.
Based on a pay-as-you-go model, it enables hosting of pervasive applications
from consumer, scientific, and business domains. However, data centers hosting
Cloud applications consume huge amounts of energy, contributing to high
operational costs and carbon footprints to the environment. Therefore, we need
Green Cloud computing solutions that can not only save energy for the
environment but also reduce operational costs. This paper presents vision,
challenges, and architectural elements for energy-efficient management of Cloud
computing environments. We focus on the development of dynamic resource
provisioning and allocation algorithms that consider the synergy between
various data center infrastructures (i.e., the hardware, power units, cooling
and software), and holistically work to boost data center energy efficiency and
performance. In particular, this paper proposes (a) architectural principles
for energy-efficient management of Clouds; (b) energy-efficient resource
allocation policies and scheduling algorithms considering quality-of-service
expectations, and devices power usage characteristics; and (c) a novel software
technology for energy-efficient management of Clouds. We have validated our
approach by conducting a set of rigorous performance evaluation study using the
CloudSim toolkit. The results demonstrate that Cloud computing model has
immense potential as it offers significant performance gains as regards to
response time and cost saving under dynamic workload scenarios.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures,Proceedings of the 2010 International Conference
on Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications (PDPTA
2010), Las Vegas, USA, July 12-15, 201
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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Green Cloud - Load Balancing, Load Consolidation using VM Migration
Recently, cloud computing is a new trend emerging in computer technology with a massive demand from the clients. To meet all requirements, a lot of cloud data centers have been constructed since 2008 when Amazon published their cloud service. The rapidly growing data center leads to the consumption of a tremendous amount of energy even cloud computing has better improved in the performance and energy consumption, but cloud data centers still absorb an immense amount of energy. To raise company’s income annually, the cloud providers start considering green cloud concepts which gives an idea about how to optimize CPU’s usage while guaranteeing the quality of service. Many cloud providers are paying more attention to both load balancing and load consolidation which are two significant components of a cloud data center.
Load balancing is taken into account as a vital part of managing income demand, improving the cloud system’s performance. Live virtual machine migration is a technique to perform the dynamic load balancing algorithm. To optimize the cloud data center, three issues are considered: First, how does the cloud cluster distribute the virtual machine (VM) requests from clients to all physical machine (PM) when each computer has a different capacity. Second, what is the solution to make CPU’s usage of all PMs to be nearly equal? Third, how to handle two extreme scenarios: rapidly rising CPU’s usage of a PM due to sudden massive workload requiring VM migration immediately and resources expansion to respond to substantial cloud cluster through VM requests. In this chapter, we provide an approach to work with those issues in the implementation and results. The results indicated that the performance of the cloud cluster was improved significantly.
Load consolidation is the reverse process of load balancing which aims to provide sufficient cloud servers to handle the client requests. Based on the advance of live VM migration, cloud data center can consolidate itself without interrupting the cloud service, and superfluous PMs are turned to save mode to reduce the energy consumption. This chapter provides a solution to approach load consolidation including implementation and simulation of cloud servers
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