DocumentCode :
2720289
Title :
Job scheduling for prime time vs. non-prime time
Author :
Lo, Virginia ; Mache, Jens
Author_Institution :
Oregon Univ., Eugene, OR, USA
fYear :
2002
fDate :
2002
Firstpage :
488
Lastpage :
493
Abstract :
Current job scheduling systems for massively parallel machines and Beowulf-class compute clusters support batch scheduling involving two classes of queues: prime time vs. non-prime time. Jobs running in these queue classes must satisfy different criteria with respect to job-size, runtime, or other resource needs. These constraints are designed to delay big jobs to non-prime time in order to provide better quality service during the prime time workday hours. This paper surveys existing prime time/non-prime time scheduling policies and investigates the sensitivity of scheduling performance to changes in the jobsize and runtime limits allowed during prime time vs. non-prime time. Our simulation study, using real workload traces from the NASA NAS IBM SP/2 cluster gives strong evidence for the use of specific prime time limits and sheds light oil the performance trade-offs regarding response times, utilization, short term scheduling algorithm (FCFS vs. EASY backfilling), and success and overflow rates.
Keywords :
parallel processing; processor scheduling; software performance evaluation; Beowulf-class compute clusters; NASA NAS IBM SP/2 cluster; batch scheduling; job scheduling; massively parallel machines; nonprime time; prime time; scheduling performance; short term scheduling algorithm; simulation study; Concurrent computing; Delay effects; Educational institutions; Job design; NASA; Parallel machines; Processor scheduling; Runtime; Scheduling algorithm; Time factors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Cluster Computing, 2002. Proceedings. 2002 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2066-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CLUSTR.2002.1137789
Filename :
1137789
Link To Document :
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