As users increasingly require better quality of service from Grids, resource management and scheduling mechanisms have to evolve in order to satisfy competing demands on limited resources. Traditional schedulers for Grids are system centric and favour system performance over increasing user’s utility. On the other hand market oriented schedulers are price-based systems that favour users but are based solely on user valuations. This paper proposes a novel meta-scheduler that unifies the advantages of both the systems for benefiting both users and resources. In order to do that, we design a valuation metric for user’s applications and computational resources based on multi-criteria requirements of users and resource load. The meta-scheduler maps user applications to suitable distributed resources using a Continuous Double Auction (CDA). Through simulation, we compare our scheduling mechanism against other common mechanisms used by current meta-schedulers. The results show that our meta-scheduler mechanism can satisfy more users than the others while still meeting traditional system-centric performance criteria such as average load and deadline of applications.
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Systems
Volume
1
Editors
M Hobbs, Y Xiang, W Zhou
Pagination
187-194
ISBN
978-0-7695-3434-3
Department/School
Information and Communication Technology
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Publication status
Published
Place of publication
United States of America
Event title
14th International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Systems
Event Venue
Melbourne, Australia
Date of Event (Start Date)
2008-12-08
Date of Event (End Date)
2008-12-10
Rights statement
Copyright 2008 IEEE
Socio-economic Objectives
220499 Information systems, technologies and services not elsewhere classified