DocumentCode
2257071
Title
A comparison of workload traces from two production parallel machines
Author
Windisch, Kurt ; Lo, Virginia ; Moore, Reagan ; Feitelson, Dror ; Nitzberg, Bill
Author_Institution
Oregon Univ., Eugene, OR, USA
fYear
1996
fDate
27-31 Oct 1996
Firstpage
319
Lastpage
326
Abstract
The analysis of workload traces from real production parallel machines can aid a wide variety of parallel processing research, providing a realistic basis for experimentation in the management of resources over an entire workload. We analyze a five-month workload trace of an Intel Paragon machine supporting a production parallel workload at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), comparing and contrasting it with a similar workload study of an Intel iPSC/860 machine at NASA Ames NAS. Our analysis of workload characteristics takes into account the job scheduling policies of the sites and focuses on characteristics such as job size distribution (job parallelism), resource usage, runtimes, submission patterns, and wait times. Despite fundamental differences in the two machines and their respective usage environments, we observe a number of interesting similarities with respect to job size distribution, system utilization, runtime distribution, and interarrival time distribution. We hope to gain insight into the potential use of workload traces for evaluating resource management policies at supercomputing sites and for providing both real-world job streams and accurate stochastic workload models for use in simulation analysis of resource management policies
Keywords
computer centres; parallel machines; processor scheduling; resource allocation; Intel Paragon machine; Intel iPSC/860 machine; NASA Ames NAS; San Diego Supercomputer Center; interarrival time distribution; job scheduling policies; job size distribution; parallel processing research; production parallel machines; production parallel workload; resource management; resource usage; runtime; simulation analysis; stochastic workload models; submission patterns; system utilization; wait times; workload traces; Analytical models; NASA; Parallel machines; Parallel processing; Pattern analysis; Production; Resource management; Runtime environment; Stochastic processes; Supercomputers;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Frontiers of Massively Parallel Computing, 1996. Proceedings Frontiers '96., Sixth Symposium on the
Conference_Location
Annapolis, MD
ISSN
1088-4955
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7551-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FMPC.1996.558107
Filename
558107
Link To Document