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Virtual platforms: achieving performance and isolation properties on shared multicore servers

Multicore servers in datacenter systems are routinely used to run multiple disparate application workload mixes. Analysis performed in Google's
datacenters show, for instance, components (i.e., processes) of up to 19 distinct applications to be co-deployed on a single multicore
node.
Virtualization technology further encourages this trend, increasing platform utilization via higher levels of workload consolidation. Systems software on these shared server nodes must meet challenges that include (a) providing end-to-end performance guarantees for possibly multiple applications and delivering global platform-level properties such as platform-level power or utilization caps., (b) mediating use of shared resources efficiently while offering isolation guarantees for multiple applications running on consolidated platforms to maintain their performance properties predictably, and
(c) meeting multiple dynamic competing application performance levels and platform-level properties efficiently, especially in oversubscribed systems.

The goals of this thesis addresses (a)-(c) as follows: (1) by developing system-level mechanisms for addressing challenges (a)-(c), (2) by demonstrating their ability to deliver improved application performance with less variability and improved platform efficiency, and (3) by creating principles and representative methods for realizing the isolation properties sought by applications and the efficiency sought for platforms. The concrete realization of these goals is a Virtual Platforms (VP) enabled hypervisor - where per application or platform-level policy objectives are expressed at the system-level via elastic resource abstractions, which may also change dynamically during system runtime. For multiple consolidated applications (and their virtual platforms), there are methods that monitor and mediate their use of shared platform resources to deliver improved isolation for predictable performance, while Merlin: a resource allocator for shared multicore servers makes it easier to implement higher-level arbitration policies while meeting multiple performance and platform properties.

As single-node multicore platforms evolve further from small numbers of homogeneous cores toward multiple sets or islands of potentially heterogeneous cores residing on a single chip, such platforms will have multiple resource managers managing their respective `islands' of resources. Though geared toward improved scalability and functionality, for applications spanning across multiple diverse resource islands to realize such opportunities, systems software must make it easier for them to interact with the island managers; and also help islands based systems achieve end-to-end performance properties via joint coordination amongst their island managers. In order to meet the challenges in maintaining performance objectives on future `scale-out' platforms, this thesis contributes inTune: a framework for inter-island operation, offering APIs and mechanisms that permit applications (and their virtual platforms) to interface with resource islands and their resource managers to jointly achieve application performance guarantees and global platform-level properties.
This thesis focuses on the management of compute, physical memory and memory bandwidth resources of single node server platforms, however the methods presented in this work can be extended to other resource types including network and storage resources.
InTune and Virtual-Platforms are implemented in the Xen hypervisor for x86 multi-core platforms with multiple NUMA memory nodes. Evaluation with representative parallel, web-based, and real-time applications and application mixes demonstrate the benefits of using our methods to achieve application performance and platform policy objectives.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/50359
Date13 January 2014
CreatorsTembey, Priyanka
ContributorsSchwan, Karsten
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
Formatapplication/pdf

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