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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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An Adaptive Scheduling Approach based on Integrated Best-worst and VIKOR for Cloud computing

TL;DR: A new adaptive approach based on a combination of the concept of the best-worst multi criteria decision-making method (BWM), and compromise ranking method (VIKOR) is proposed which improves the performance metrics like throughput, makespan, waiting time, virtual machine (VM) utilization and VM usage cost for all considered experimental scenarios in comparison with its counterparts.
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Cloud monitoring: A review, taxonomy, and open research issues

TL;DR: This paper comprehensively reviews state-of-the-art cloud monitoring solutions for private and public clouds and proposes a thematic taxonomy to classify the existing cloud monitoring Solutions based on a set of parameters.
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Multimedia Processing Pricing Strategy in GPU-Accelerated Cloud Computing

TL;DR: This paper proposes an optimal pricing strategy of GPU-accelerated multimedia processing services for maximizing the profits of both the cloud provider and users and finds the optimal solutions of bothThe cloud provider's and users’ profit functions.
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Integrating deployment architectures and resource consumption in timed object-oriented models

TL;DR: This paper proposes an integration of deployment architectures in the Real-Time ABS language, with restrictions on processing resources, a timed, abstract and behavioral specification language with a formal semantics and a Java-like syntax that targets concurrent, distributed and object-oriented systems.
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Dynamic and Fault-Tolerant Clustering for Scientific Workflows

TL;DR: A general task failure modeling framework that uses a maximum likelihood estimation-based parameter estimation process to model workflow performance and a dynamic task clustering strategy to optimize the workflow's makespan by dynamically adjusting the clustering granularity when failures arise is proposed.
References
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A view of cloud computing

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The Grid 2: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure

TL;DR: The Globus Toolkit as discussed by the authors is a toolkit for high-throughput resource management for distributed supercomputing applications, focusing on real-time wide-distributed instrumentation systems.
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Cloud computing and emerging IT platforms: Vision, hype, and reality for delivering computing as the 5th utility

TL;DR: This paper defines Cloud computing and provides the architecture for creating Clouds with market-oriented resource allocation by leveraging technologies such as Virtual Machines (VMs), and provides insights on market-based resource management strategies that encompass both customer-driven service management and computational risk management to sustain Service Level Agreement (SLA) oriented resource allocation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The GRID: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure

TL;DR: The main purpose is to update the designers and users of parallel numerical algorithms with the latest research in the field and present the novel ideas, results and work in progress and advancing state-of-the-art techniques in the area of parallel and distributed computing for numerical and computational optimization problems in scientific and engineering application.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: This work states that clusters, Grids, and peer‐to‐peer (P2P) networks have emerged as popular paradigms for next generation parallel and distributed computing and introduces a number of resource management and application scheduling challenges in the domain of security, resource and policy heterogeneity, fault tolerance, continuously changing resource conditions, and politics.
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