Snow White clouds and the Seven Dwarfs
Snow White clouds and the Seven Dwarfs
With increasing availability of Cloud computing services, this paper addresses the challenge consumers of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) have in determining which IaaS provider and resources are best suited to run an application that may have specific Quality of Service (QoS) requirements. Utilising application modelling to predict performance is an attractive concept, but is very difficult with the limited information IaaS providers typically provide about the computing resources. This paper reports on an initial investigation into using Dwarf benchmarks to measure the performance of virtualised hardware, conducting experiments on BonFIRE and Amazon EC2. The results we obtain demonstrate that labels such as ‘small’, ’medium’, ’large’ or a number of ECUs are not sufficiently informative to predict application performance, as one might expect. Furthermore, knowing the CPU speed, cache size or RAM size is not necessarily sufficient either as other complex factors can lead to significant performance differences. We show that different hardware is better suited for different types of computations and, thus, the relative performance of applications varies across hardware. This is reflected well by Dwarf benchmarks and we show how different applications correlate more strongly with different Dwarfs, leading to the possibility of using Dwarf benchmark scores as parameters in application models.
application benchmarking, QoS, application modelling, performance prediction, dwarfs, BonFIRE, amazon EC2
978-0-7695-4622-3
Phillips, Stephen
47610c30-a543-4bac-a96a-bc1fce564a59
Engen, Vegard
5ab4f73a-6cb5-4a58-9d89-ebced3182962
Papay, Juri
21652b35-de29-439c-b343-cb3437ef2f9e
29 November 2011
Phillips, Stephen
47610c30-a543-4bac-a96a-bc1fce564a59
Engen, Vegard
5ab4f73a-6cb5-4a58-9d89-ebced3182962
Papay, Juri
21652b35-de29-439c-b343-cb3437ef2f9e
Phillips, Stephen, Engen, Vegard and Papay, Juri
(2011)
Snow White clouds and the Seven Dwarfs.
IEEE 3rd International Conference on Cloud Computing Technology and Science (CloudCom 2011), Athens, Greece.
29 Nov - 01 Dec 2011.
8 pp
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Other)
Abstract
With increasing availability of Cloud computing services, this paper addresses the challenge consumers of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) have in determining which IaaS provider and resources are best suited to run an application that may have specific Quality of Service (QoS) requirements. Utilising application modelling to predict performance is an attractive concept, but is very difficult with the limited information IaaS providers typically provide about the computing resources. This paper reports on an initial investigation into using Dwarf benchmarks to measure the performance of virtualised hardware, conducting experiments on BonFIRE and Amazon EC2. The results we obtain demonstrate that labels such as ‘small’, ’medium’, ’large’ or a number of ECUs are not sufficiently informative to predict application performance, as one might expect. Furthermore, knowing the CPU speed, cache size or RAM size is not necessarily sufficient either as other complex factors can lead to significant performance differences. We show that different hardware is better suited for different types of computations and, thus, the relative performance of applications varies across hardware. This is reflected well by Dwarf benchmarks and we show how different applications correlate more strongly with different Dwarfs, leading to the possibility of using Dwarf benchmark scores as parameters in application models.
More information
Published date: 29 November 2011
Venue - Dates:
IEEE 3rd International Conference on Cloud Computing Technology and Science (CloudCom 2011), Athens, Greece, 2011-11-29 - 2011-12-01
Keywords:
application benchmarking, QoS, application modelling, performance prediction, dwarfs, BonFIRE, amazon EC2
Organisations:
IT Innovation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 273157
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/273157
ISBN: 978-0-7695-4622-3
PURE UUID: 63e7f5de-1b31-44b4-b045-790889a0cf02
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 02 Feb 2012 11:37
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:58
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Contributors
Author:
Stephen Phillips
Author:
Vegard Engen
Author:
Juri Papay
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