• DocumentCode
    2498637
  • Title

    Adaptive Approach to Information Dissemination in Self-Organizing Grids

  • Author

    Erdil, Deger Cenk ; Lewis, Michael J. ; Abu-Ghazaleh, Nael B.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., State Univ. of New York, Binghamton, NY
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    16-18 July 2006
  • Firstpage
    55
  • Lastpage
    55
  • Abstract
    The size, complexity, heterogeneity, and dynamism of large-scale computational grids make autonomic grid services and solutions necessary. In particular, grid schedulers must map applications onto resources whose state (1) influences the effectiveness of scheduling choices, and (2) changes frequently and considerably. A grid resource state information dissemination service must negotiate the inherent tradeoff between covering a large portion of the grid (so that all schedulers can make informed decisions with the largest number of options), and limiting the protocol´s overhead (i.e. the number of packets sent). This paper argues that probabilistic forwarding protocols must adapt to state changes, because static assignments of forwarding probabilities lead to excessive overhead or lower-than-possible query satisfaction rates in some scenarios. We introduce an approach that compares a node´s local utilization and query generation rates to corresponding rates in the node´s vicinity, and in the grid as a whole. These comparisons, in turn, produce a score that is used to adjust forwarding probabilities. We show that even this simple initial adaptive approach can work better than protocols with static forwarding probability assignments
  • Keywords
    grid computing; information dissemination; routing protocols; autonomic computing; grid resource state information dissemination; grid scheduler; large-scale computational grid; probabilistic forwarding protocol; query generation rate; resource discovery; self-organizing grid; Application software; Computer science; Contracts; Grid computing; Humans; Large-scale systems; Mesh generation; Personal communication networks; Processor scheduling; Protocols; Adaptive information dissemination; autonomic computing; grids; resource discovery.; selforganizing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Autonomic and Autonomous Systems, 2006. ICAS '06. 2006 International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Silicon Valley, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2653-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICAS.2006.7
  • Filename
    1690265