Proceedings Article10.1145/1869389.1869396
Wimpy node clusters: what about non-wimpy workloads?
Willis Lang,Jignesh M. Patel,Srinath Shankar +2 more
- 07 Jun 2010
- pp 47-55
TL;DR: Results show that in most cases, computationally complex queries exhibit disproportionate scaleup characteristics which potentially makes scale-out with low-end nodes an expensive and lower performance solution.
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Abstract: The high cost associated with powering servers has introduced new challenges in improving the energy efficiency of clusters running data processing jobs. Traditional high-performance servers are largely energy inefficient due to various factors such as the over-provisioning of resources. The increasing trend to replace traditional high-performance server nodes with low-power low-end nodes in clusters has recently been touted as a solution to the cluster energy problem. However, the key tacit assumption that drives such a solution is that the proportional scale-out of such low-power cluster nodes results in constant scaleup in performance. This paper studies the validity of such an assumption using measured price and performance results from a low-power Atom-based node and a traditional Xeon-based server and a number of published parallel scaleup results. Our results show that in most cases, computationally complex queries exhibit disproportionate scaleup characteristics which potentially makes scale-out with low-end nodes an expensive and lower performance solution.
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References
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Power provisioning for a warehouse-sized computer
Xiaobo Fan,Wolf-Dietrich Weber,Luiz Andre Barroso +2 more
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TL;DR: This paper presents the aggregate power usage characteristics of large collections of servers for different classes of applications over a period of approximately six months, and uses the modelling framework to estimate the potential of power management schemes to reduce peak power and energy usage.
Parallel database systems: the future of high performance database systems
David J. DeWitt,Jim Gray +1 more
TL;DR: Eradata, Tandem, and a host of startup companies have successfully developed and marketed highly parallel database machines.
PowerNap: eliminating server idle power
David Meisner,Brian T. Gold,Thomas F. Wenisch +2 more
- 07 Mar 2009
TL;DR: The PowerNap concept, an energy-conservation approach where the entire system transitions rapidly between a high-performance active state and a near-zero-power idle state in response to instantaneous load, is proposed and the Redundant Array for Inexpensive Load Sharing (RAILS) is introduced.
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