Title :
How to share a bag of tasks optimally in a heterogeneous cluster - three models, three answers
Author :
Rosenberg, Arnold L.
Author_Institution :
Massachusetts Univ., Amherst, MA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. In the world of sequential computers, the abstract RAM model enables one to design provably efficient algorithms for a broad range of actual architectures and a broad range of workloads. In the world of multiprocessors, the abstract BSP model serves a similar function. No analogue of the RAM and BSP models is known for modern computing platforms such as clusters of workstations - especially heterogeneous ones, whose constituent workstations may differ in computational power - and the various modalities of Internet-based computing. In this talk, we present circumstantial evidence that no such single algorithmic model can exist for heterogeneous clusters. We describe three quite similar computational problems related to computing a large collection of mutually independent tasks on a cluster. (Two of the problems can be shown formally to be equivalent.) Despite their similarities, the three problems require drastically different algorithmic approaches if one wants provably optimal solutions.
Keywords :
Internet; computational complexity; multiprocessing systems; optimisation; parallel algorithms; processor scheduling; sequential machines; task analysis; workstation clusters; Internet-based computing; abstract BSP model; abstract RAM model; algorithmic model; computing platforms; heterogeneous cluster; multiprocessors; mutually independent tasks; optimal solutions; optimal task sharing; sequential computers; workstation clusters; Algorithm design and analysis; Analog computers; Clustering algorithms; Computational modeling; Computer architecture; Internet; Read-write memory; Workstations;
Conference_Titel :
Simulation Symposium, 2004. Proceedings. 37th Annual
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2110-X
DOI :
10.1109/SIMSYM.2004.1299459