Stratus: Load Balancing the Cloud for Carbon Emissions Control
Large public cloud infrastructure can utilise power which is generated by a multiplicity of power plants. The cost of electricity will vary among the power plants and each will emit different amounts of carbon for a given amount of energy generated. This infrastructure services traffic that can come...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on cloud computing 2013-01, Vol.1 (1), p.1-1 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Large public cloud infrastructure can utilise power which is generated by a multiplicity of power plants. The cost of electricity will vary among the power plants and each will emit different amounts of carbon for a given amount of energy generated. This infrastructure services traffic that can come from anywhere on the planet. It is desirable, for latency purposes, to route the traffic to the data centre that is closest in terms of geographical distance, costs the least to power and emits the smallest amount of carbon for a given request. It is not always possible to achieve all of these goals so we model both the networking and computational components of the infrastructure as a graph and propose the Stratus system which utilises Voronoi partitions to determine which data centre requests should be routed to based on the relative priorities of the cloud operator. |
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ISSN: | 2168-7161 2168-7161 2372-0018 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TCC.2013.4 |