By analyzing energy-efficient management of data centers, this paper proposes
and develops a class of interesting {\it Group-Server Queues}, and establishes
two representative group-server queues through loss networks and impatient
customers, respectively. Furthermore, such two group-server queues are given
model descriptions and necessary interpretation. Also, simple mathematical
discussion is provided, and simulations are made to study the expected queue
lengths, the expected sojourn times and the expected virtual service times. In
addition, this paper also shows that this class of group-server queues are
often encountered in many other practical areas including communication
networks, manufacturing systems, transportation networks, financial networks
and healthcare systems. Note that the group-server queues are always used to
design effectively dynamic control mechanisms through regrouping and
recombining such many servers in a large-scale service system by means of, for
example, bilateral threshold control, and customers transfer to the buffer or
server groups. This leads to the large-scale service system that is divided
into several adaptive and self-organizing subsystems through scheduling of
batch customers and regrouping of service resources, which make the middle
layer of this service system more effectively managed and strengthened under a
dynamic, real-time and even reward optimal framework. Based on this,
performance of such a large-scale service system may be improved greatly in
terms of introducing and analyzing such group-server queues. Therefore, not
only analysis of group-server queues is regarded as a new interesting research
direction, but there also exists many theoretical challenges, basic
difficulties and open problems in the area of queueing networks.Comment: 24 Pages, 9 figure