DocumentCode
2908558
Title
Resource Management Using Untrusted Auctioneers in a Grid Economy
Author
Bubendorfer, Kris ; Thomson, Wayne
Author_Institution
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
fYear
2006
fDate
Dec. 2006
Firstpage
74
Lastpage
74
Abstract
The CORA (Coallocative, Oversubscribing Resource Allocation) architecture is an auction based resource reservation system that makes combinatorial allocations of resources to clients. The focus of this paper is on the use of cryptographic tools in CORA to remove the need for trust in the resource auctioneer. One of the nice properties of this approach is that the auctioneers can be drawn from an arbitrary pool of untrusted peers, without the need to establish pre-existing trust or restrict the role of auctioneer to a trusted system service. This approach results in more flexibility in the design of large economic systems, with the potential for wide distribution of load amongst many auctioneers. In addition, only the winners of the auction and the prices they pay are revealed while all other bid values are kept secret. It is our belief that future growth or commercialisation of large scale Grid systems requires the provision of such mechanisms to share the wide pool of Grid brokered resources such as computers, software, licences and peripherals amongst many users and organisations. This paper encapsulates an overview of our design, our experiences of implementing two different secure auction protocols and the performances that we have achieved.
Keywords
Computer architecture; Computer science; Cryptography; Environmental economics; Grid computing; Mathematics; Resource management; Scalability; Security; Statistics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
e-Science and Grid Computing, 2006. e-Science '06. Second IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2734-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/E-SCIENCE.2006.261158
Filename
4031047
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