DocumentCode
3072091
Title
Power aware provisioning in cloud computing environment
Author
Raj, V. K Mohan ; Shriram, R.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., BS Abdur Rahman Univ., Chennai, India
fYear
2011
fDate
18-19 March 2011
Firstpage
6
Lastpage
11
Abstract
In today´s IT computing era, there is shift to aggregate computing resources into data centers (DC) shared by pool of users. With the increasing popularity of cloud computing, this pool of users are now more global than any-time in the past The resource demand of these users are inadvertently governed by strict “service level agreements”. In this paradigm, data centers´ operational energy costs are a rising concern as they continue an upward trend that is poised to surpass the capital cost of equipment in a typical lifetime usage model. A data center is a complex distributed system comprised of a hierarchy of numerous components; and operating at multitude levels of usage abstractions. Virtualization is an approach to consolidating multiple services onto a smaller number of computing resources. A virtualized server environment allows computing resources to be shared among multiple performance-isolated platforms called virtual machines. Virtual Machine(VM) technology has been widely applied in data center environments due to its seminal features, including reliability, flexibility, and the ease of management. We define set of service-provider controllable policies comprising of number of physical servers, possible number of VMs, possible VM request queue length and maximum number of requests per VM threshold. For each of these defined policy, we implement a dynamic resource provisioning framework for virtualized server environment which achieves power efficiency by using optimum power efficient allocation and workload forecasting scheme to ensure that workload request meet the defined SLAs and the data center operates with least power consumption. Finally, based on the results from our implementation, we analyze and infer on the best policy which meets SLA commitments and has the least energy consumption.
Keywords
Poisson distribution; client-server systems; cloud computing; power aware computing; power consumption; queueing theory; resource allocation; virtual machines; IT computing; Poisson distribution; cloud computing environment; computing resource aggregation; computing resource sharing; data center operational energy costs; data centers; distributed system; dynamic resource provisioning; equipment capital cost; lifetime usage model; power aware provisioning; power consumption; power efficiency; request queue length; resource demand; service level agreement; service-provider controllable policies; usage abstraction; virtual machines; virtualized server environment; workload forecasting; workload request; Computational modeling; Energy consumption; Power demand; Servers; Silicon; Switches; Virtual machining; cloud computing; power aware provisioning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer, Communication and Electrical Technology (ICCCET), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Tamilnadu
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-9393-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCCET.2011.5762447
Filename
5762447
Link To Document