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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Cross-Layer Design for Energy Efficiency on Data Center Network

Cheocherngngarn, Tosmate 27 September 2012 (has links)
Energy efficient infrastructures or green IT (Information Technology) has recently become a hot button issue for most corporations as they strive to eliminate every inefficiency from their enterprise IT systems and save capital and operational costs. Vendors of IT equipment now compete on the power efficiency of their devices, and as a result, many of the new equipment models are indeed more energy efficient. Various studies have estimated the annual electricity consumed by networking devices in the U.S. in the range of 6 - 20 Terra Watt hours. Our research has the potential to make promising solutions solve those overuses of electricity. An energy-efficient data center network architecture which can lower the energy consumption is highly desirable. First of all, we propose a fair bandwidth allocation algorithm which adopts the max-min fairness principle to decrease power consumption on packet switch fabric interconnects. Specifically, we include power aware computing factor as high power dissipation in switches which is fast turning into a key problem, owing to increasing line speeds and decreasing chip sizes. This efficient algorithm could not only reduce the convergence iterations but also lower processing power utilization on switch fabric interconnects. Secondly, we study the deployment strategy of multicast switches in hybrid mode in energy-aware data center network: a case of famous Fat-tree topology. The objective is to find the best location to deploy multicast switch not only to achieve optimal bandwidth utilization but also minimize power consumption. We show that it is possible to easily achieve nearly 50% of energy consumption after applying our proposed algorithm. Finally, although there exists a number of energy optimization solutions for DCNs, they consider only either the hosts or network, but not both. We propose a joint optimization scheme that simultaneously optimizes virtual machine (VM) placement and network flow routing to maximize energy savings. The simulation results fully demonstrate that our design outperforms existing host- or network-only optimization solutions, and well approximates the ideal but NP-complete linear program. To sum up, this study could be crucial for guiding future eco-friendly data center network that deploy our algorithm on four major layers (with reference to OSI seven layers) which are physical, data link, network and application layer to benefit power consumption in green data center.
2

A Novel Architecture, Topology, and Flow Control for Data Center Networks

Yuan, Tingqiu 23 February 2022 (has links)
With the advent of new applications such as Cloud Computing, Blockchain, Big Data, and Machine Learning, modern data center network (DCN) architecture has been evolving to meet numerous challenging requirements such as scalability, agility, energy efficiency, and high performance. Among the new applications ones are expediting the convergence of high-performance computing and Data Centers. This convergence has prompted research into a single, converged data center architecture that unites computing, storage, and interconnect network in a synthetic system designed to reduce the total cost of ownership and result in greater efficiency and productivity. The interconnect network is a critical aspect of Data Centers, as it sets performance bounds and determines most of the total cost of ownership. The design of an interconnect network consists of three factors: topology, routing, and congestion control, and this thesis aims to satisfy the above challenging requirements. To address the challenges noted above, the communication patterns for emerging applications are investigated, and it is shown that the dynamic and diverse traffic patterns (denoted as *-cast), especially multi-cast, in-cast, broadcast (one-to-all), and all-to-all-cast, play a significant impact in the performance of emerging applications. Inspired by hypermesh topologies, this thesis presents a novel cost-efficient topology for large-scale Data Center Networks (DCNs), which is called HyperOXN. HyperOXN takes advantage of high-radix switch components leveraging state-of-the-art colorless wavelength division multiplexing technologies, effectively supports *-cast traffic, and at the same time meets the demands for high throughput, low latency, and lossless delivery. HyperOXN provides a non-blocking interconnect network with a relatively low overhead-cost. Through theoretical analysis, this thesis studies the topological properties of the proposed HyperOXN and compares it with other different types of interconnect networks such as Fat-Tree, Flattened Butterfly, and Hypercube-like topologies. Passive optical cross-connection networks are used in the HyperOXN topology, enabling economical, power-efficient, and reliable communication within DCNs. It is shown that HyperOXN outperforms a comparable Fat-Tree topology in cost, throughput, power consumption and cabling under a variety of workload conditions. A HyperOXN network provides multiple paths between the source and its destination to obtain high bandwidth and achieve fault tolerance. Inspired by a power-of-two-choices technique, a novel stochastic global congestion-aware load balancing algorithm, which can be used to achieve relatively optimal load balances amongst multiple shared paths is designed. It also guarantees low latency for short-lived mouse flows and high throughput for long-lasting elephant flows. Furthermore, the stability of the flow-scheduling algorithm is formally proven. Experimental results show that the algorithm successfully eliminated the interactions of the elephant and mouse DC flows, and ensured high network bandwidth utilization.
3

Network topologies for cost reduction and QoS improvement in massive data centers / Topologies réseau pour la réduction des coûts et l'amélioration de la qualité du service dans les centres de données massives

Chkirbene, Zina 29 June 2017 (has links)
L'expansion des services en ligne, l'avènement du big data, favorisé par l'internet des objets et les terminaux mobiles, a entraîné une croissance exponentielle du nombre de centres de données qui fournissent des divers services de cloud computing. Par conséquent, la topologie du centre de données est considérée comme un facteur d'influence sur la performance du centre de données. En effet, les topologies des centres de données devraient offrir une latence faible, une longueur de chemin moyenne réduite avec une bande passante élevée. Ces exigences augmentent la consommation énergétique dans les centres de données. Dans cette dissertation, différentes solutions ont été proposées pour surmonter ces problèmes. Tout d'abord, nous proposons une nouvelle topologie appelée LCT (Linked Cluster Topology) qui augmente le nombre de nœuds, améliore la connexion réseau et optimise le routage des données pour avoir une faible latence réseau. Une nouvelle topologie appelée VacoNet (Variable connexion Network) a été également présentée. VacoNet offre un nouveau algorithme qui définit le exact nombre de port par commutateur pour connecter le nombre de serveurs requis tout en réduisant l'énergie consommée et les matériaux inutilisés (câbles, commutateurs). En outre, nous _étudions une nouvelle technique pour optimiser la consumation d'énergie aux centres de données. Cette technique peut périodiquement estimer la matrice de trafic et gérer l'_état des ports de serveurs tout en maintenant le centre de données entièrement connecté. La technique proposée prend en considération le trafic réseau dans la décision de gestion des ports. / Data centers (DC) are being built around the world to provide various cloud computing services. One of the fundamental challenges of existing DC is to design a network that interconnects massive number of nodes (servers)1 while reducing DC' cost and energy consumption. Several solutions have been proposed (e.g. FatTree, DCell and BCube), but they either scale too fast (i.e., double exponentially) or too slow. Effcient DC topologies should incorporate high scalability, low latency, low Average Path Length (APL), high Aggregated Bottleneck Throughput (ABT) and low cost and energy consumption. Therefore, in this dissertation, different solutions have been proposed to overcome these problems. First, we propose a novel DC topology called LCT (Linked Cluster Topology) as a new solution for building scalable and cost effective DC networking infrastructures. The proposed topology reduces the number of redundant connections between clusters of nodes, while increasing the numbers of nodes without affecting the network bisection bandwidth. Furthermore, in order to reduce the DCs cost and energy consumption, we propose first a new static energy saving topology called VacoNet (Variable Connection Network) that connects the needed number of servers while reducing the unused materials (cables, switches). Also, we propose a new approach that exploits the correlation in time of internode communication and some topological features to maximize energy saving without too much impacting the average path length.
4

EXPLOITING THE SPATIAL DIMENSION OF BIG DATA JOBS FOR EFFICIENT CLUSTER JOB SCHEDULING

Akshay Jajoo (9530630) 16 December 2020 (has links)
With the growing business impact of distributed big data analytics jobs, it has become crucial to optimize their execution and resource consumption. In most cases, such jobs consist of multiple sub-entities called tasks and are executed online in a large shared distributed computing system. The ability to accurately estimate runtime properties and coordinate execution of sub-entities of a job allows a scheduler to efficiently schedule jobs for optimal scheduling. This thesis presents the first study that highlights spatial dimension, an inherent property of distributed jobs, and underscores its importance in efficient cluster job scheduling. We develop two new classes of spatial dimension based algorithms to<br>address the two primary challenges of cluster scheduling. First, we propose, validate, and design two complete systems that employ learning algorithms exploiting spatial dimension. We demonstrate high similarity in runtime properties between sub-entities of the same job by detailed trace analysis on four different industrial cluster traces. We identify design challenges and propose principles for a sampling based learning system for two examples, first for a coflow scheduler, and second for a cluster job scheduler.<br>We also propose, design, and demonstrate the effectiveness of new multi-task scheduling algorithms based on effective synchronization across the spatial dimension. We underline and validate by experimental analysis the importance of synchronization between sub-entities (flows, tasks) of a distributed entity (coflow, data analytics jobs) for its efficient execution. We also highlight that by not considering sibling sub-entities when scheduling something it may also lead to sub-optimal overall cluster performance. We propose, design, and implement a full coflow scheduler based on these assertions.

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