DocumentCode :
2820817
Title :
Shock resistant time warp
Author :
Ferscha, Alois ; Johnson, James
Author_Institution :
Inst. fur Angewandte Inf., Wien Univ., Austria
fYear :
1999
fDate :
1999
Firstpage :
92
Lastpage :
100
Abstract :
In an attempt to cope with time-varying workload, traditional adaptive time warp protocols are designed to react in response to performance changes by altering control parameter configurations, like the amount of available memory, the size of the checkpointing interval, the frequency of GVT computation, fossil collection invocations, etc. We call those schemes “reactive” because all control decisions are undertaken based on historical performance information collected at runtime, and come into effect in future system states. We develop environment aware, self adaptive time warp LPs implementing a pro-active performance control scheme, addressing the timeliness of control decisions. Opposed to reactive TW schemes, our pro-active control mechanism based on a statistical analysis of the state history …S t-2Δ, St-Δ, St periodically collected in (real) time intervals of size Δ, forecasts a future LP state Sˆt+Δ. A performance control decision CD(Sˆt+Δ) is established, that is most appropriate for the expected future LP state, i.e. the state when the corresponding control activity would become effective. Depending on the forecast quality, a pro-active scheme will presumably exhibit performance superior to reactive schemes, at least for cases where state changes in the time frame Δ are very likely. We study the ability of pro-active TW LPs, to adapt to sudden load changes, especially to abruptly occurring background workloads injected by other applications executing concurrently with the TW simulation on a network of workstations. Experimental results show that the protocol is able to capture abrupt changes in both computational and communication resource availability, justifying the title: shock resistant time warp
Keywords :
distributed processing; software performance evaluation; statistical analysis; time warp simulation; workstation clusters; GVT computation; adaptive time warp protocols; forecast quality; performance change; pro-active scheme; reactive scheme; runtime; self adaptive time warp; shock resistant time warp; statistical analysis; sudden load change; time-varying workload; workstation network; Adaptive control; Checkpointing; Control systems; Electric shock; Frequency; Programmable control; Protocols; Runtime; Size control; Statistical analysis;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Parallel and Distributed Simulation, 1999. Proceedings. Thirteenth Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0155-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PADS.1999.766165
Filename :
766165
Link To Document :
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