DocumentCode :
2375074
Title :
A Concurrent G-Negotiation Mechanism for Grid Resource Co-allocation
Author :
Shi, Benyun ; Sim, Kwang Mong
Author_Institution :
Hong Kong Baptist Univ., Hongkong
fYear :
2007
fDate :
24-26 Oct. 2007
Firstpage :
532
Lastpage :
535
Abstract :
Since computationally intensive applications may often require more resources than a single computing machine can provide in one administrative domain, bolstering resource co-allocation is essential for realizing the grid vision. Given that resource providers and consumers may have different requirements and performance goals, successfully obtaining commitments through concurrent negotiations with multiple resource providers to simultaneously access several resources is a very challenging task for consumers. The novel contribution of this work is devising a concurrent mechanism that (i) coordinates multiple one-to-many concurrent negotiations between a consumer and multiple resource providers, and (ii) manages (de-)commitment for consumers during the one-to-many negotiation in grid co-allocation. In this work, a utility-oriented coordination strategy and three classes of commitment strategies for concurrent negotiation are presented. A series of simulations were carried out in a variety of settings and favorable results show that the strategies (both commitment strategies and the coordination strategy) outperformed existing models in terms of utility, negotiation speed, and success rate.
Keywords :
grid computing; negotiation support systems; resource allocation; commitment strategy; concurrent G-negotiation mechanism; grid resource coallocation; multiple one-to-many concurrent negotiations; utility-oriented coordination strategy; Access protocols; Application software; Computer applications; Computer science; Computer vision; Concurrent computing; Grid computing; Proposals; Resource management; Yarn;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
e-Business Engineering, 2007. ICEBE 2007. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Hong Kong
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3003-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICEBE.2007.68
Filename :
4402144
Link To Document :
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