DocumentCode :
1980777
Title :
Unveiling the resource consumption overhead of virtual machine consolidation in data centers
Author :
Mingfu Li ; Wei Liang ; Jingping Bi ; Zhongcheng Li
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Comput. Technol., Beijing, China
fYear :
2012
fDate :
3-7 Dec. 2012
Firstpage :
3262
Lastpage :
3267
Abstract :
In recent years, virtualization technologies are applied to data centers for resource sharing. Virtual Machine Monitor (VMM) can consolidate virtual machines (VMs) running on multiple physical servers onto a single one via live VM migration, consequently improving energy efficiency of data centers. VM consolidation is usually modeled as a bin packing problem aiming at minimizing the number of servers being used. However, resource consumption overhead of consolidating VMs is seldom considered in existing approaches. In this paper, the overhead is defined as the resource consumption difference between the server and all the VMs running on it. We theoretically and experimentally prove that under the realistic constrains, this overhead exists and remains steady with the increasing of consolidating VMs. We also propose Margin Reserved Consolidation (MRC) algorithm to supplement existing works. Besides, we conduct experiments to validate the overhead. Experiments based on a representative benchmark show that 11.7% of the server´s CPU resource is occupied by the overhead averagely.
Keywords :
computer centres; energy conservation; multiprocessing systems; power aware computing; resource allocation; virtual machines; CPU resource; MRC algorithm; VM consolidation; bin packing problem; data centers; energy efficiency; live VM migration; margin reserved consolidation algorithm; physical servers; resource consumption overhead; resource sharing; virtual machine consolidation; virtual machine monitor; virtualization technologies; data center; overhead; virtual machine consolidation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
ISSN :
1930-529X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0920-2
Electronic_ISBN :
1930-529X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2012.6503617
Filename :
6503617
Link To Document :
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