DocumentCode :
2760630
Title :
Grid resource discovery using small world overlay graphs
Author :
Ali, Kashif ; Datta, Suprakash ; Aboelaze, Mokhtar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., York Univ., Toronto, Ont.
fYear :
2005
fDate :
1-4 May 2005
Firstpage :
1010
Lastpage :
1013
Abstract :
Computational grids are believed to be an effective and scalable solution to the problem of resource sharing over large, heterogeneous networks of computing devices. Since grids are highly distributed in nature, one of the most challenging problems is the discovery of dynamic resources in a grid. In this paper we use ideas from P2P systems to propose a solution for the problem. Specifically, we classify nodes as consumers and producers, depending on whether they consume or produce more jobs. Our algorithm connects all producer nodes using a overlay network that is a small-world graph (the graph is produced by adding "shortcut" chords to a circle). The consumer nodes hang off the small world graph. The producer nodes are forced to take part in resource cataloging and discovery. This has three distinct advantages - first, it prevents "freeloading" by forcing producers to do useful work; second, it frees the consumers to only do computations; third, the low diameter of the overlay graph ensures that all resources are within a small number of hops. We simulate and evaluate the performance of our algorithm in realistic traffic conditions. We evaluate the performance of our algorithm using metrics like the average time to answer the query, the average number of requests that were dropped and the average number of hops traveled by query packets. Our experiments show that our algorithm performs well with thousands of nodes
Keywords :
graph theory; grid computing; peer-to-peer computing; queueing theory; P2P systems; computational grids; grid resource discovery; heterogeneous networks; performance evaluation; query packets; resource sharing; small-world graph; Computational modeling; Computer networks; Computer science; Distributed computing; Electronic mail; Grid computing; Peer to peer computing; Processor scheduling; Resource management; Traffic control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2005. Canadian Conference on
Conference_Location :
Saskatoon, Sask.
ISSN :
0840-7789
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8885-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CCECE.2005.1557147
Filename :
1557147
Link To Document :
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