Abstract

AbstractRecently, the large-scale cluster of data center is usually constructed to support both HPC and Cloud computing. It can be explained from two aspects: (1) The data center is typically a sharing environment for all the users, users may submit different types of jobs (HPC and Cloud computing) for processing currently; (2) Some applications can be divided into two parts of subtasks which are suitable to HPC and Cloud computing respectively, e.g. the AMS (Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer) experiment is such a typical application. Thus in order to provide good service for both computing models, it is needed to construct a HPC and Cloud hybrid environment. An existing management mechanism is to allocate fixed proportions of resources for different application environments. However, this approach has a significant performance drawback that is the low resource utilization. In order to overcome this drawback, we propose a dynamic resource management framework and mechanism to satisfy the requirements of both HPC and Cloud computing. Firstly we present a prediction model that is used to predict the arrival rate of all kinds of jobs (HPC types and Cloud types). Based on the prediction results, we propose a dynamic resource allocation algorithm, which manages dynamic resources allocation by using queuing theory. Finally, we evaluate our mechanism by real data sets from AMS experiment and Cloud tasks running on the HPC center in Southeast University. The results show that the proposed mechanism can effectively improve resource utilization at least 30% in this hybrid environment.KeywordsCloud ComputingArrival RateCloud EnvironmentDynamic ResourceDynamic Resource AllocationThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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