DocumentCode
3140936
Title
Performance Modeling of Virtual Machine Live Migration
Author
Wu, Yangyang ; Zhao, Ming
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Florida Int. Univ., Miami, FL, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
4-9 July 2011
Firstpage
492
Lastpage
499
Abstract
System virtualization is becoming pervasive and it is enabling important new computing diagrams such as cloud computing. Live virtual machine (VM) migration is a unique capability of system virtualization which allows applications to be transparently moved across physical machines with a consistent state captured by their VMs. Although live VM migration is generally fast, it is a resource-intensive operation and can impact the application performance and resource usage of the migrating VM as well as other concurrent VMs. However, existing studies on live migration performance are often based on the assumption that there are sufficient resources on the source and destination hosts, which is often not the case for highly consolidated systems. As the scale of virtualized systems such as clouds continue to grow, the use of live migration becomes increasingly more important for managing performance and reliability in such systems. Therefore, it is key to understand the performance of live VM migration under different levels of resource availability. This paper addresses this need by creating performance models for live migration which can be used to predict a VM´s migration time given its application´s behavior and the resources available to the migration. A series of experiments were conducted on Xen to profile the time for migrating a DomU VM running different resource-intensive applications while Dom0 is allocated different CPU shares for processing the migration. Regression methods are then used to create the performance model based on the profiling data. The results show that the VM´s migration time is indeed substantially impacted by Dom0´s CPU allocation whereas the performance model can accurately capture this relationship with the coefficient of determination generally higher than 90%.
Keywords
cloud computing; regression analysis; virtual machines; virtualisation; DomU VM; Xen; cloud computing; performance modeling; profiling data; regression methods; resource availability; system virtualization; virtual machine live migration; Cloud computing; Conferences;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cloud Computing (CLOUD), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
ISSN
2159-6182
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0836-7
Electronic_ISBN
2159-6182
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CLOUD.2011.109
Filename
6008747
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