Title :
Efficient Use of Geographically Spread Cloud Resources
Author :
Kanizo, Yossi ; Raz, Danny ; Zlotnik, Anatoly
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Technion - Israel Inst. of Technol., Haifa, Israel
Abstract :
The demand for cloud services in each geographical location changes over time depending on the time of the day. Thus, when one data center (say in the east coast of the US) experiences peak load, other data centers (say in Europe) experience lower load. This paper addresses the efficiency of load sharing between geographically spread cloud resources. We observe that despite the network latency, for several common services it is very beneficial to share the load across two or more data centers, each located in a different time zone. We rigorously analyze a simple setting in which customers can be redirected between two servers, each experiencing a different local load. We show that a threshold-based load sharing scheme, in which loads are redirected when exceeding some threshold, is significantly more efficient than a static load sharing scheme, where loads are redirected independently of the current state. Our load sharing techniques can reduce the average service time by 40%during peak demand in typical service scenarios. Looking at the same result from a different perspective, we show that (in the same setting) deploying our geographically based load sharing scheme can provide similar user experience with 15%-20% less resources. To further validate our approach, we deployed Wikipedia instances on Amazon EC2 both in Europe and the US and tested our techniques using real Wikimedia access logs. Our results show that threshold-based load sharing between the US and Europe, achieves an improvement of up to 32% in average service time over these logs.
Keywords :
Web sites; cloud computing; computer centres; resource allocation; Amazon EC2; Europe; US; Wikimedia access log; Wikipedia; cloud service; data center; geographical location; geographically based load sharing scheme; geographically spread cloud resource; local load; network latency; static load sharing; threshold-based load sharing; Cloud computing; Delays; Europe; Load management; Load modeling; Servers; Steady-state; Cloud computing; Delay aware load sharing; Resource allocation;
Conference_Titel :
Cluster, Cloud and Grid Computing (CCGrid), 2013 13th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Delft
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6465-2
DOI :
10.1109/CCGrid.2013.18