Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

In Cloud, Do MTC or HTC Service Providers Benefit from the Economies of Scale?

Published 5 Mar 2010 in cs.DC and cs.PF | (1003.1168v3)

Abstract: In this paper, we intend to answer one key question to the success of cloud computing: in cloud, do many task computing (MTC) or high throughput computing (HTC) service providers, which offer the corresponding computing service to end users, benefit from the economies of scale? Our research contributions are three-fold: first, we propose an innovative usage model, called dynamic service provision (DSP) model, for MTC or HTC service providers. In the DSP model, the resource provider provides the service of creating and managing runtime environments for MTC or HTC service providers, and consolidates heterogeneous MTC or HTC workloads on the cloud platform; second, according to the DSP model, we design and implement DawningCloud, which provides automatic management for heterogeneous workloads; third, a comprehensive evaluation of DawningCloud has been performed in an emulatation experiment. We found that for typical workloads, in comparison with the previous two cloud solutions, DawningCloud saves the resource consumption maximally by 46.4% (HTC) and 74.9% (MTC) for the service providers, and saves the total resource consumption maximally by 29.7% for the resource provider. At the same time, comparing with the traditional solution that provides MTC or HTC services with dedicated systems, DawningCloud is more cost-effective. To this end, we conclude that for typical MTC and HTC workloads, on the cloud platform, MTC and HTC service providers and the resource provider can benefit from the economies of scale.

Citations (37)

Summary

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.