Conference
Grid Computing
About: Grid Computing is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Grid computing & Grid. Over the lifetime, 2247 publications have been published by the conference receiving 49317 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
8 Nov 2004
TL;DR: The goals of BOINC are described, the design issues that were confronted, and the solutions to these problems are described.
Abstract: BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) is a software system that makes it easy for scientists to create and operate public-resource computing projects. It supports diverse applications, including those with large storage or communication requirements. PC owners can participate in multiple BOINC projects, and can specify how their resources are allocated among these projects. We describe the goals of BOINC, the design issues that we confronted, and our solutions to these problems.
2,221 citations
Proceedings Article•
1 Jan 2003
2,203 citations
17 May 2010
TL;DR: First results of simulation-driven evaluation of heuristics for dynamic reallocation of VMs using live migration according to current requirements for CPU performance are presented, showing that the proposed technique brings substantial energy savings, while ensuring reliable QoS.
Abstract: Rapid growth of the demand for computational power by scientific, business and web-applications has led to the creation of large-scale data centers consuming enormous amounts of electrical power. We propose an energy efficient resource management system for virtualized Cloud data centers that reduces operational costs and provides required Quality of Service (QoS). Energy savings are achieved by continuous consolidation of VMs according to current utilization of resources, virtual network topologies established between VMs and thermal state of computing nodes. We present first results of simulation-driven evaluation of heuristics for dynamic reallocation of VMs using live migration according to current requirements for CPU performance. The results show that the proposed technique brings substantial energy savings, while ensuring reliable QoS. This justifies further investigation and development of the proposed resource management system.
884 citations
1 Dec 2014
TL;DR: This work proposes a classification of techniques for automating application scaling in the cloud into five main categories: static threshold-based rules, control theory, reinforcement learning, queuing theory and time series analysis, and uses this classification to carry out a literature review of proposals.
Abstract: Cloud computing environments allow customers to dynamically scale their applications. The key problem is how to lease the right amount of resources, on a pay-as-you-go basis. Application re-dimensioning can be implemented effortlessly, adapting the resources assigned to the application to the incoming user demand. However, the identification of the right amount of resources to lease in order to meet the required Service Level Agreement, while keeping the overall cost low, is not an easy task. Many techniques have been proposed for automating application scaling. We propose a classification of these techniques into five main categories: static threshold-based rules, control theory, reinforcement learning, queuing theory and time series analysis. Then we use this classification to carry out a literature review of proposals for auto-scaling in the cloud.
805 citations
[...]
TL;DR: Ready access to large amounts of computing power could be achieved inexpensively with collections of small devices rather than expensive single supercomputers in the 1970s.
Abstract: Ready access to large amounts of computing power has been a persistent goal of computer scientists for decades. Since the 1960s, visions of computing utilities as pervasive and as simple as the telephone have motivated system designers [1]. It was recognized in the 1970s that such power could be achieved inexpensively with collections of small devices rather than expensive single supercomputers. Interest in schemes for managing distributed processors [2, 3, 4] became so popular that there was even once a minor controversy over the meaning of the word ‘distributed’ [5].
580 citations
Performance Metrics
| Year | Papers |
|---|---|
| 2021 | 1 |
| 2020 | 112 |
| 2019 | 6 |
| 2018 | 153 |
| 2017 | 17 |
| 2016 | 183 |