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Journal ArticleDOI

CloudSim: a toolkit for modeling and simulation of cloud computing environments and evaluation of resource provisioning algorithms

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TLDR
The result of this case study proves that the federated Cloud computing model significantly improves the application QoS requirements under fluctuating resource and service demand patterns.
Abstract
Cloud computing is a recent advancement wherein IT infrastructure and applications are provided as ‘services’ to end-users under a usage-based payment model. It can leverage virtualized services even on the fly based on requirements (workload patterns and QoS) varying with time. The application services hosted under Cloud computing model have complex provisioning, composition, configuration, and deployment requirements. Evaluating the performance of Cloud provisioning policies, application workload models, and resources performance models in a repeatable manner under varying system and user configurations and requirements is difficult to achieve. To overcome this challenge, we propose CloudSim: an extensible simulation toolkit that enables modeling and simulation of Cloud computing systems and application provisioning environments. The CloudSim toolkit supports both system and behavior modeling of Cloud system components such as data centers, virtual machines (VMs) and resource provisioning policies. It implements generic application provisioning techniques that can be extended with ease and limited effort. Currently, it supports modeling and simulation of Cloud computing environments consisting of both single and inter-networked clouds (federation of clouds). Moreover, it exposes custom interfaces for implementing policies and provisioning techniques for allocation of VMs under inter-networked Cloud computing scenarios. Several researchers from organizations, such as HP Labs in U.S.A., are using CloudSim in their investigation on Cloud resource provisioning and energy-efficient management of data center resources. The usefulness of CloudSim is demonstrated by a case study involving dynamic provisioning of application services in the hybrid federated clouds environment. The result of this case study proves that the federated Cloud computing model significantly improves the application QoS requirements under fluctuating resource and service demand patterns. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Citations
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A systematic review on task scheduling in Fog computing: Taxonomy, tools, challenges, and future directions

TL;DR: A deeper understanding of the research issues is facilitated through a detailed taxonomy and significant challenges in existing work are distinguished, which will help potential researchers easily identify specific research problems and future directions to enhance scheduling efficiency.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A network-aware virtual machine placement algorithm in mobile cloud computing environment

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Virtual Machine Resource Allocation for Multimedia Cloud: A Nash Bargaining Approach

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Adaptive virtual machine consolidation framework based on performance-to-power ratio in cloud data centers

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Book ChapterDOI

Model-Based Energy Efficiency Analysis of Software Architectures

TL;DR: This paper outlines a model-based approach for evaluating the EE of software architectures and presents a model that describes the central power consumption characteristics of a software system and couple the model with an existing model- based performance prediction approach to evaluate the consumption characteristicsof a software architecture in varying usage contexts.
References
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The GRID: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure

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Journal ArticleDOI

GridSim: a toolkit for the modeling and simulation of distributed resource management and scheduling for Grid computing

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