Moreno, Ismael Solis and Garraghan, Peter and Townend, Paul and Xu, Jie (2014) Analysis, modeling and simulation of workload patterns in a large-scale utility cloud. IEEE Transactions on Cloud Computing, 2 (2). pp. 208-221. ISSN 2168-7161
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Understanding the characteristics and patterns of workloads within a Cloud computing environment is critical in order to improve resource management and operational conditions while Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees are maintained. Simulation models based on realistic parameters are also urgently needed for investigating the impact of these workload characteristics on new system designs and operation policies. Unfortunately there is a lack of analyses to support the development of workload models that capture the inherent diversity of users and tasks, largely due to the limited availability of Cloud tracelogs as well as the complexity in analyzing such systems. In this paper we present a comprehensive analysis of the workload characteristics derived from a production Cloud data center that features over 900 users submitting approximately 25 million tasks over a time period of a month. Our analysis focuses on exposing and quantifying the diversity of behavioral patterns for users and tasks, as well as identifying model parameters and their values for the simulation of the workload created by such components. Our derived model is implemented by extending the capabilities of the CloudSim framework and is further validated through empirical comparison and statistical hypothesis tests. We illustrate several examples of this work's practical applicability in the domain of resource management and energy-efficiency.