Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://idr.nitk.ac.in/jspui/handle/123456789/10669
Title: Dynamic ranking-based MapReduce job scheduler to exploit heterogeneous performance in a virtualized environment
Authors: Rathinaraja, J.
Ananthanarayana, V.S.
Paul, A.
Issue Date: 2019
Citation: Journal of Supercomputing, 2019, Vol.75, 11, pp.7520-7549
Abstract: More data, more information. Big data helps businesses and research communities to gain insights and increase productivity. Many public cloud service providers offer Hadoop MapReduce as a service based on pay-per-use via infrastructure as a service on clusters of virtual machines promising on-demand horizontal scaling. These clusters of virtual machines are launched in various physical machines across racks in cloud data centers. Such multi-tenancy negatively introduces performance heterogeneity for Hadoop virtual machines due to hardware heterogeneity and interference from co-located virtual machine. Performance heterogeneity largely affects MapReduce job latency and resource utilization of rented Hadoop virtual clusters. Default MapReduce schedulers assign map/reduce tasks assuming the hardware is homogeneous. Interference-aware schedulers perform by only observing the interference pattern generated by co-located virtual machines. These schedulers do not consider the heterogeneous performance of virtual machines.Therefore, we propose a dynamic ranking-based MapReduce job scheduler that places the map and reduces tasks based on a virtual machine s performance rank to minimize job latency and improve resource utilization. Our proposed approach calculates the performance score for each virtual machine based on hardware heterogeneity and co-located virtual machine interference. Then, it ranks the virtual machines based on the map and reduce performance separately to place map and reduce tasks. To demonstrate our ideas, we have set a test bed with 29 virtual machines on eight physical machines with different configurations and capacities. We modify a default fair scheduler in Hadoop 2.x to incorporate our ideas and evaluate them with different workloads on the PUMA dataset. The proposed method is then compared against a default fair scheduler (resource-aware) and an interference-aware scheduler based on job latency and resource utilization. Finally, we argue in favor of our approach as it improves resource utilization by 30 65% and overall job latency by up to 30%. 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
URI: http://idr.nitk.ac.in/jspui/handle/123456789/10669
Appears in Collections:1. Journal Articles

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