Title :
Resource management in cloud computing with frictions and congestion weather
Author :
Valdez-Vivas, Martin ; Bambos, Nicholas ; Apostolopoulos, John
Abstract :
Cloud infrastructures with virtualized CPU and memory resources have the potential for providing high quality of service at increased levels of energy efficiency. By dynamically tailoring the capacity of a virtual machine to workload demands, a cloud infrastructure can significantly reduce the number of physical resources it has online, saving on decreased power costs. These resource management techniques, however, have yet to gain widespread appeal among network engineers due to the significant delays and setup costs in activating or reconfiguring cloud resources. A further challenge is these "frictions" fluctuate through time, based on complex system-wide supply and demand "weather" patterns in the cloud as a whole. In this paper, we develop a loss queueing model for capacity provisioning for a virtual machine that draws its computation resources from the cloud under varying friction cost. We solve for the optimal control policy using dynamic programming and discuss its intuitive structural properties. Finally we run simulations to compare the performance of the optimal policy against two benchmarks and a heuristic policy.
Keywords :
cloud computing; dynamic programming; energy conservation; optimal control; power aware computing; queueing theory; resource allocation; storage management; virtual machines; capacity provisioning; cloud computing; cloud infrastructure; cloud resources; complex system; congestion weather; dynamic programming; energy efficiency; heuristic policy; loss queueing model; memory resource management; optimal control policy; supply and demand weather patterns; varying friction cost; virtual machine; virtualized CPU; Clouds; Dynamic programming; Friction; Meteorology; Optimal control; Resource management; Virtual machining;
Conference_Titel :
Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM), 2014 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Austin, TX
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2014.7037158