Abstract

With the booming development of data parallel frameworks, the coflow abstraction has been greatly favored by data center transport designs, for its prominent ability in capturing application-level semantics. To accelerate job completion, coflow completion time (CCT) is a most important metric, and coflow scheduling is the most effective and widely-adopted means of optimizing CCT. However, most existing coflow scheduling mechanisms neglect the ubiquitous in-network bottlenecks and schedule coflows based on non-blocking giant switch hyperthesis. Such a practice is likely to result in undesired link contention inside the fabric, finally impairing CCT performance. To address this problem, we propose the Distributed Bottleneck-Aware coflow scheduling algorithm called DBA, which approximates the minimum remaining time first (MRTF) heuristic on all fabric-wide links. In this way, core link bandwidths are allocated to coflows as expected and the CCT performance will not be violated. As an evolutionary algorithm, DBA enhances the traditional dual decomposition method thus converges to the optimal bandwidth allocation very fast. Extensive simulations verify DBA's outstanding CCT performance as well as high link utilization. Furthermore, DBA introduces very little overhead and is robust to routing strategies, parameter variations and computation delays.

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