scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Eucalyptus Open-Source Cloud-Computing System

TLDR
This work presents Eucalyptus -- an open-source software framework for cloud computing that implements what is commonly referred to as Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS); systems that give users the ability to run and control entire virtual machine instances deployed across a variety physical resources.
Abstract
Cloud computing systems fundamentally provide access to large pools of data and computational resources through a variety of interfaces similar in spirit to existing grid and HPC resource management and programming systems.  These types of systems offer a new programming target for scalable application developers and have gained popularity over the past few years.  However, most cloud computing systems in operation today are proprietary, rely upon infrastructure that is invisible to the research community, or are not explicitly designed to be instrumented and modified by systems researchers. In this work, we present Eucalyptus -- an open-source software framework for cloud computing that implements what is commonly referred to as Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS); systems that give users the ability to run and control entire virtual machine instances deployed across a variety physical resources. We outline the basic principles of the Eucalyptus design, detail important operational aspects of the system, and discuss architectural trade-offs that we have made in order to allow Eucalyptus to be portable, modular and simple to use on infrastructure commonly found within academic settings.  Finally, we provide evidence that Eucalyptus enables users familiar with existing Grid and HPC systems to explore new cloud computing functionality while maintaining access to existing, familiar application development software and Grid middle-ware.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Review: A survey on security issues in service delivery models of cloud computing

TL;DR: A survey of the different security risks that pose a threat to the cloud is presented and a new model targeting at improving features of an existing model must not risk or threaten other important features of the current model.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Mesos: a platform for fine-grained resource sharing in the data center

TL;DR: The results show that Mesos can achieve near-optimal data locality when sharing the cluster among diverse frameworks, can scale to 50,000 (emulated) nodes, and is resilient to failures.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cloud Computing: Issues and Challenges

TL;DR: This paper first discusses two related computing paradigms - Service-Oriented Computing and Grid computing, and their relationships with Cloud computing, then identifies several challenges from the Cloud computing adoption perspective.
Journal ArticleDOI

Virtual Infrastructure Management in Private and Hybrid Clouds

TL;DR: OpenNebula as mentioned in this paper is an open source, virtual infrastructure manager that deploys virtualized services on both a local pool of resources and external IaaS clouds, providing features not found in other cloud software or virtualization-based data center management software.
Book ChapterDOI

InterCloud: utility-oriented federation of cloud computing environments for scaling of application services

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that federated Cloud computing model has immense potential as it offers significant performance gains as regards to response time and cost saving under dynamic workload scenarios.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

MapReduce: simplified data processing on large clusters

TL;DR: This paper presents the implementation of MapReduce, a programming model and an associated implementation for processing and generating large data sets that runs on a large cluster of commodity machines and is highly scalable.
Journal ArticleDOI

MapReduce: simplified data processing on large clusters

TL;DR: This presentation explains how the underlying runtime system automatically parallelizes the computation across large-scale clusters of machines, handles machine failures, and schedules inter-machine communication to make efficient use of the network and disks.
Book

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Anatomy of the Grid: Enabling Scalable Virtual Organizations

TL;DR: The authors present an extensible and open Grid architecture, in which protocols, services, application programming interfaces, and software development kits are categorized according to their roles in enabling resource sharing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Xen and the art of virtualization

TL;DR: Xen, an x86 virtual machine monitor which allows multiple commodity operating systems to share conventional hardware in a safe and resource managed fashion, but without sacrificing either performance or functionality, considerably outperform competing commercial and freely available solutions.
Related Papers (5)