Title :
Dynamic Fractional Resource Scheduling versus Batch Scheduling
Author :
Stillwell, Mark ; Vivien, Frédéric ; Casanova, Henri
Author_Institution :
INRIA, Univ. of Lyon, Lyon, France
fDate :
3/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We propose a novel job scheduling approach for homogeneous cluster computing platforms. Its key feature is the use of virtual machine technology to share fractional node resources in a precise and controlled manner. Other VM-based scheduling approaches have focused primarily on technical issues or extensions to existing batch scheduling systems, while we take a more aggressive approach and seek to find heuristics that maximize an objective metric correlated with job performance. We derive absolute performance bounds and develop algorithms for the online nonclairvoyant version of our scheduling problem. We further evaluate these algorithms in simulation against both synthetic and real-world HPC workloads and compare our algorithms to standard batch scheduling approaches. We find that our approach improves over batch scheduling by orders of magnitude in terms of job stretch, while leading to comparable or better resource utilization. Our results demonstrate that virtualization technology coupled with lightweight online scheduling strategies can afford dramatic improvements in performance for executing HPC workloads.
Keywords :
distributed processing; resource allocation; scheduling; virtual machines; virtualisation; HPC workloads; VM-based scheduling approach; batch scheduling; dynamic fractional resource scheduling; homogeneous cluster computing platforms; job scheduling approach; job stretch; online nonclairvoyant version; online scheduling strategies; resource utilization; virtual machine technology; virtualization technology; Measurement; Memory management; Optimization; Processor scheduling; Resource management; Schedules; Scheduling; Cluster; batch scheduling.; high-performance computing; scheduler; vector bin packing; virtual machine;
Journal_Title :
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPDS.2011.183