DocumentCode
170280
Title
Community Resources for Enabling Research in Distributed Scientific Workflows
Author
Da Silva, Rafael Ferreira ; Weiwei Chen ; Juve, Gideon ; Vahi, Karan ; Deelman, Ewa
Author_Institution
Inf. Sci. Inst., Univ. of Southern California, Marina, CA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2014
fDate
20-24 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
177
Lastpage
184
Abstract
A significant amount of recent research in scientific workflows aims to develop new techniques, algorithms and systems that can overcome the challenges of efficient and robust execution of ever larger workflows on increasingly complex distributed infrastructures. Since the infrastructures, systems and applications are complex, and their behavior is difficult to reproduce using physical experiments, much of this research is based on simulation. However, there exists a shortage of realistic datasets and tools that can be used for such studies. In this paper we describe a collection of tools and data that have enabled research in new techniques, algorithms, and systems for scientific workflows. These resources include: 1) execution traces of real workflow applications from which workflow and system characteristics such as resource usage and failure profiles can be extracted, 2) a synthetic workflow generator that can produce realistic synthetic workflows based on profiles extracted from execution traces, and 3) a simulator framework that can simulate the execution of synthetic workflows on realistic distributed infrastructures. This paper describes how we have used these resources to investigate new techniques for efficient and robust workflow execution, as well as to provide improvements to the Pegasus Workflow Management System or other workflow tools. Our goal in describing these resources is to share them with other researchers in the workflow research community.
Keywords
distributed processing; natural sciences computing; resource allocation; workflow management software; Pegasus Workflow Management System; community resources; distributed infrastructure; distributed scientific workflows; execution traces; failure profile; physical experiment; resource usage; synthetic workflow execution simulation; synthetic workflow generator; workflow application; workflow tool; Communities; Correlation; Engines; Estimation; Generators; Monitoring; Runtime; Scientific Workflows; Workflow Simulation; Workload Archive; Workload Profiling and Characterization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
e-Science (e-Science), 2014 IEEE 10th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Sao Paulo
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-4288-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/eScience.2014.44
Filename
6972263
Link To Document