Abstract

The widespread deployment of varying networking technologies, coupled with the exponential increase in end-user data demand, have led to the proliferation of multi-homed or multi-interface enabled devices. To date, these interfaces are mainly utilized one at a time based on network availability, cost, and user-choice. While researchers have focused on simultaneously leveraging these interfaces by aggregating their bandwidths, these solutions however, have faced a steep deployment barrier. In this paper, we propose a novel optimal, energy-efficient, and deployable bandwidth aggregation system (OPERETTA) for multiple interface enabled devices. OPERETTA satisfies three goals: achieving a user defined throughput level with optimal energy consumption over multiple interfaces, deployability without changes to current legacy servers, and leveraging incremental deployment to achieve increased performance gains. We present the OPERETTA architecture and formulate the optimal scheduling problem as a mixed integer programming problem yielding an efficient solution. We evaluate OPERETTA via implementation on the the Windows OS, and further verify our results with simulations on NS2. Our evaluation shows the tradeoffs between the energy and throughput goals. Furthermore, with no modifications to current legacy servers, OPERETTA achieves throughput gains up to 150% compared to current operating systems with the same energy consumption. In addition, with as few as 25% of the servers becoming OPERETTA enabled, OPERETTA performance reaches the throughput upper bound, highlighting its incremental deployment and performance gains.

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