Abstract

Fair bandwidth allocation in datacenter networks has received a substantial amount of research attention, as multiple tenants are hosted by virtual machines in a public cloud. In the context of private datacenters, link bandwidth is shared among applications running data parallel frameworks, such as MapReduce, instead. In this paper, we introduce the rigorous definition of performance-centric fairness , with the guiding principle that the performance that data parallel applications will enjoy should be proportional to their weights. We first investigate the problem of maximizing application performance while maintaining strict performance-centric fairness. We then present an inherent tradeoff between fairness and efficiency, which is interpreted from the perspectives of bandwidth utilization and social welfare, respectively. From the first perspective, we propose an algorithm to improve bandwidth utilization by introducing an extended version of fairness. From the second perspective, we formulate an optimization problem of bandwidth allocation that maximizes the social welfare across all the applications, allowing a tunable degree of relaxation on performance-centric fairness. A distributed algorithm is then presented to solve the problem, based on dual based decomposition. With extensive simulations, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our algorithms in improving efficiency and application performance (by up to $1.4X$ ), with flexible degree of relaxation on the performance-centric fairness.

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