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Optimal Task Migration in Service-Oriented Systems: Algorithms and Mechanisms

Optimal Task Migration in Service-Oriented Systems: Algorithms and Mechanisms
Optimal Task Migration in Service-Oriented Systems: Algorithms and Mechanisms
In service-oriented systems, such as grids and clouds, users are able to outsource complex computational tasks by procuring resources on demand from remote service providers. As these providers typically display highly heterogeneous performance characteristics, service procurement can be challenging when the consumer is uncertain about the computational requirements of its task a priori. Given this, we here argue that the key to addressing this problem is task migration, where the consumer can move a partially completed task from one provider to another. We show that doing this optimally is NP-hard, but we also propose two novel algorithms, based on new and established search techniques, that can be used by an intelligent agent to efficiently find the optimal solution in realistic settings. However, these algorithms require full information about the providers' quality of service and costs over time. Critically, as providers are usually self-interested agents, they may lie strategically about these to inflate profits. To address this, we turn to mechanism design and propose a payment scheme that incentivises truthfulness. In empirical experiments, we show that (i) task migration results in an up to 160% improvement in utility, (ii) full information about the providers' costs is necessary to achieve this and (iii) our mechanism requires only a small investment to elicit this information.
73-78
Stein, Sebastian
cb2325e7-5e63-475e-8a69-9db2dfbdb00b
Gerding, Enrico
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Jennings, Nick
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Stein, Sebastian
cb2325e7-5e63-475e-8a69-9db2dfbdb00b
Gerding, Enrico
d9e92ee5-1a8c-4467-a689-8363e7743362
Jennings, Nick
ab3d94cc-247c-4545-9d1e-65873d6cdb30

Stein, Sebastian, Gerding, Enrico and Jennings, Nick (2010) Optimal Task Migration in Service-Oriented Systems: Algorithms and Mechanisms. 19th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI), Lisbon, Portugal. pp. 73-78 .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Other)

Abstract

In service-oriented systems, such as grids and clouds, users are able to outsource complex computational tasks by procuring resources on demand from remote service providers. As these providers typically display highly heterogeneous performance characteristics, service procurement can be challenging when the consumer is uncertain about the computational requirements of its task a priori. Given this, we here argue that the key to addressing this problem is task migration, where the consumer can move a partially completed task from one provider to another. We show that doing this optimally is NP-hard, but we also propose two novel algorithms, based on new and established search techniques, that can be used by an intelligent agent to efficiently find the optimal solution in realistic settings. However, these algorithms require full information about the providers' quality of service and costs over time. Critically, as providers are usually self-interested agents, they may lie strategically about these to inflate profits. To address this, we turn to mechanism design and propose a payment scheme that incentivises truthfulness. In empirical experiments, we show that (i) task migration results in an up to 160% improvement in utility, (ii) full information about the providers' costs is necessary to achieve this and (iii) our mechanism requires only a small investment to elicit this information.

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More information

Published date: August 2010
Venue - Dates: 19th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI), Lisbon, Portugal, 2010-08-01
Organisations: Agents, Interactions & Complexity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 270994
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/270994
PURE UUID: fd4c8dd9-ec13-47bf-add5-a9f6fb30ff88
ORCID for Sebastian Stein: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2858-8857
ORCID for Enrico Gerding: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7200-552X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 May 2010 13:58
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:30

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Contributors

Author: Sebastian Stein ORCID iD
Author: Enrico Gerding ORCID iD
Author: Nick Jennings

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