|   | CMU-CS-99-140 Computer Science Department
 School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
 
    
     
 CMU-CS-99-140
 
Dynamic Function Placement in Active Storage Clusters 
Khalil Amiri, David Petrou, Gregory R. Ganger, Garth A. Gibson 
June 1999  
CMU-CS-99-140.psCMU-CS-99-140.pdf
 Keywords: Distributed systems, performance of systems, management, 
software configuration management, operating systems, storage management,
filesystems management, organization and design
 Optimally partitioning application and filesystem functionality within a 
cluster of clients and servers is a difficult problem due to dynamic 
variations in application behavior, resource availability and workload mixes. 
This paper presents ABACUS, a run-time system that monitors and dynamically 
changes function placement for applications that manipulate large data sets.
Several examples of data-intensive workloads are used to show the importance 
of proper function placement and its dependence on dynamic run-time 
characteristics, with performance differences frequently reaching 2-10X. We 
evaluate how well the ABACUS prototype adapts to run-time system behavior, 
including both long-term variation (e.g., filter selectivity) and short-term 
variation (e.g., multi-phase applications and inter-application resource
contention). Our experiments with ABACUS indicate that it is possible to adapt
in all of these situations and that the adaptation converges most quickly in
those cases where the performance impact is most significant.
 
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