Title :
Taming Wild Horses: The Need for Virtual Time-Based Scheduling of VMs in Network Simulations
Author :
Yoginath, Srikanth B. ; Perumalla, Kalyan S. ; Henz, Brian J.
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. & Eng. Div., Oak Ridge Nat. Lab., Oak Ridge, TN, USA
Abstract :
The next generation of scalable network simulators employ virtual machines (VMs) to act as high-fidelity models of traffic producer/consumer nodes in simulated networks. However, network simulations could be inaccurate if VMs are not scheduled according to virtual time, especially when many VMs are hosted per simulator core in a multi-core simulator environment. Since VMs are by default free-running, on the outset, it is not clear if, and to what extent, their untamed execution affects the results in simulated scenarios. Here, we provide the first quantitative basis for establishing the need for generalized virtual time scheduling of VMs in network simulators, based on an actual prototyped implementations. To exercise breadth, our system is tested with disparate applications: (a) a set of message passing parallel programs, (b) a computer worm propagation phenomenon, and (c) a mobile ad-hoc wireless network simulation. We define and use error metrics and benchmarks in scaled tests to empirically report the poor match of traditional, fairness-based VM scheduling to VM-based network simulation, and also clearly show the better performance of our simulation-specific scheduler, with up to 64 VMs hosted on a 12-core simulator node.
Keywords :
invasive software; message passing; mobile ad hoc networks; multiprocessing systems; parallel programming; scheduling; virtual machines; 12-core simulator node; VM-based network simulation; computer worm propagation phenomenon; consumer nodes; error metrics; fairness-based VM scheduling; message passing parallel programs; mobile ad-hoc wireless network simulation; multicore simulator environment; scalable network simulators; simulator core; traffic producer; virtual machines; virtual time-based scheduling; wild horse taming; Ad hoc networks; Benchmark testing; Computational modeling; Measurement; Multiplexing; Processor scheduling; Virtual machine monitors; Ad-hoc Wireless; High-fidelity; MPI; Multi-core; Network Simulation; Time Synchronization; Virtual Machines;
Conference_Titel :
Modeling, Analysis & Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems (MASCOTS), 2012 IEEE 20th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2453-3
DOI :
10.1109/MASCOTS.2012.18