Workload Balancing for Highly Available Services: The Case of the N+M Redundancy Model
In today's information based world the demand on highly available services is ever increasing. Fault tolerant systems are capable of providing the expected services even in the presence of a failure. This is achieved through the redundancy of the service providers, where service assignments i.e...
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creator | Kanso, A. Khendek, F. Toeroe, M. |
description | In today's information based world the demand on highly available services is ever increasing. Fault tolerant systems are capable of providing the expected services even in the presence of a failure. This is achieved through the redundancy of the service providers, where service assignments i.e. workloads are shifted to redundant healthy service providers when a failure occurs. The assignment and the shift are performed according to a redundancy model. A well-known redundancy model is the N+M where we have N active service providers and M standbys. In case of a failure of an active provider, the services are reassigned to its standbys. Maintaining a balanced workload before and after a failure in the N+M redundancy is a challenging task. Especially when the solution is decided at configuration time, and no runtime information is available. This is exactly the issue we tackle in this paper. We present three different approaches aiming at solving this problem with different priorities of the relevant constraints. Our solutions do not require any runtime information and can maintain a balanced workload even after a failure by anticipating the workload redistribution. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1109/DASC.2011.40 |
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Fault tolerant systems are capable of providing the expected services even in the presence of a failure. This is achieved through the redundancy of the service providers, where service assignments i.e. workloads are shifted to redundant healthy service providers when a failure occurs. The assignment and the shift are performed according to a redundancy model. A well-known redundancy model is the N+M where we have N active service providers and M standbys. In case of a failure of an active provider, the services are reassigned to its standbys. Maintaining a balanced workload before and after a failure in the N+M redundancy is a challenging task. Especially when the solution is decided at configuration time, and no runtime information is available. This is exactly the issue we tackle in this paper. We present three different approaches aiming at solving this problem with different priorities of the relevant constraints. 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Our solutions do not require any runtime information and can maintain a balanced workload even after a failure by anticipating the workload redistribution.</description><subject>Availability</subject><subject>Equations</subject><subject>fault tolerance</subject><subject>Highly available systems</subject><subject>Load management</subject><subject>Redundancy</subject><subject>redundancy models</subject><subject>Runtime</subject><subject>Silicon</subject><subject>system configuration</subject><subject>workload balancing</subject><isbn>9781467300063</isbn><isbn>1467300063</isbn><isbn>9780769546124</isbn><isbn>0769546129</isbn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>conference_proceeding</rsrctype><creationdate>2011</creationdate><recordtype>conference_proceeding</recordtype><sourceid>6IE</sourceid><sourceid>RIE</sourceid><recordid>eNotjktPwzAQhI0QEqj0xo2L76hlN07smFsIjyK1INEKjtXW3rQG06CkVMq_JzxOM_NJMxohzhDGiGAvb4p5OU4AcZzCgRhak4PRNks1Junhb8ZUGwUAWh2LYdu-wY_XFgyciJfXunmPNXl5TZG2LmzXsqobOQnrTexksacQaRVZzrnZB8ftlVxsWJbUsqwruev948VMPrP_2vq-38lZ7TmeiqOKYsvDfx2Ixd3topyMpk_3D2UxHQULu5EB64zOSHvMq5S4MqwcucSrVc8r5P67BeVzzjBxK8w9EDNDoilTJnNqIM7_ZkOPl59N-KCmW2rEXGVWfQPVclCk</recordid><startdate>201112</startdate><enddate>201112</enddate><creator>Kanso, A.</creator><creator>Khendek, F.</creator><creator>Toeroe, M.</creator><general>IEEE</general><scope>6IE</scope><scope>6IL</scope><scope>CBEJK</scope><scope>RIE</scope><scope>RIL</scope></search><sort><creationdate>201112</creationdate><title>Workload Balancing for Highly Available Services: The Case of the N+M Redundancy Model</title><author>Kanso, A. ; Khendek, F. ; Toeroe, M.</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-i90t-709c765a6d18f4aef7e3cac2d3bc76f1e781903d8e512cb18d0aeee026a5375c3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>conference_proceedings</rsrctype><prefilter>conference_proceedings</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2011</creationdate><topic>Availability</topic><topic>Equations</topic><topic>fault tolerance</topic><topic>Highly available systems</topic><topic>Load management</topic><topic>Redundancy</topic><topic>redundancy models</topic><topic>Runtime</topic><topic>Silicon</topic><topic>system configuration</topic><topic>workload balancing</topic><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Kanso, A.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Khendek, F.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Toeroe, M.</creatorcontrib><collection>IEEE Electronic Library (IEL) Conference Proceedings</collection><collection>IEEE Proceedings Order Plan All Online (POP All Online) 1998-present by volume</collection><collection>IEEE Xplore All Conference Proceedings</collection><collection>IEEE Electronic Library (IEL)</collection><collection>IEEE Proceedings Order Plans (POP All) 1998-Present</collection></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext_linktorsrc</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Kanso, A.</au><au>Khendek, F.</au><au>Toeroe, M.</au><format>book</format><genre>proceeding</genre><ristype>CONF</ristype><atitle>Workload Balancing for Highly Available Services: The Case of the N+M Redundancy Model</atitle><btitle>2011 IEEE Ninth International Conference on Dependable, Autonomic and Secure Computing</btitle><stitle>dasc</stitle><date>2011-12</date><risdate>2011</risdate><spage>97</spage><epage>104</epage><pages>97-104</pages><isbn>9781467300063</isbn><isbn>1467300063</isbn><eisbn>9780769546124</eisbn><eisbn>0769546129</eisbn><abstract>In today's information based world the demand on highly available services is ever increasing. Fault tolerant systems are capable of providing the expected services even in the presence of a failure. This is achieved through the redundancy of the service providers, where service assignments i.e. workloads are shifted to redundant healthy service providers when a failure occurs. The assignment and the shift are performed according to a redundancy model. A well-known redundancy model is the N+M where we have N active service providers and M standbys. In case of a failure of an active provider, the services are reassigned to its standbys. Maintaining a balanced workload before and after a failure in the N+M redundancy is a challenging task. Especially when the solution is decided at configuration time, and no runtime information is available. This is exactly the issue we tackle in this paper. We present three different approaches aiming at solving this problem with different priorities of the relevant constraints. 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subjects | Availability Equations fault tolerance Highly available systems Load management Redundancy redundancy models Runtime Silicon system configuration workload balancing |
title | Workload Balancing for Highly Available Services: The Case of the N+M Redundancy Model |
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