ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Enel: Context-Aware Dynamic Scaling of Distributed Dataflow Jobs using Graph Propagation

84   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Dominik Scheinert
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث الهندسة المعلوماتية
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Distributed dataflow systems like Spark and Flink enable the use of clusters for scalable data analytics. While runtime prediction models can be used to initially select appropriate cluster resources given target runtimes, the actual runtime performance of dataflow jobs depends on several factors and varies over time. Yet, in many situations, dynamic scaling can be used to meet formulated runtime targets despite significant performance variance. This paper presents Enel, a novel dynamic scaling approach that uses message propagation on an attributed graph to model dataflow jobs and, thus, allows for deriving effective rescaling decisions. For this, Enel incorporates descriptive properties that capture the respective execution context, considers statistics from individual dataflow tasks, and propagates predictions through the job graph to eventually find an optimized new scale-out. Our evaluation of Enel with four iterative Spark jobs shows that our approach is able to identify effective rescaling actions, reacting for instance to node failures, and can be reused across different execution contexts.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Distributed dataflow systems enable the use of clusters for scalable data analytics. However, selecting appropriate cluster resources for a processing job is often not straightforward. Performance models trained on historical executions of a concrete job are helpful in such situations, yet they are usually bound to a specific job execution context (e.g. node type, softwar
In the era of big-data, the jobs submitted to the clouds exhibit complicated structures represented by graphs, where the nodes denote the sub-tasks each of which can be accommodated at a slot in a server, while the edges indicate the communication co nstraints among the sub-tasks. We develop a framework for efficient allocation of graph jobs in geo-distributed cloud networks (GDCNs), explicitly considering the power consumption of the datacenters (DCs). We address the following two challenges arising in graph job allocation: i) the allocation problem belongs to NP-hard nonlinear integer programming; ii) the allocation requires solving the NP-complete sub-graph isomorphism problem, which is particularly cumbersome in large-scale GDCNs. We develop a suite of efficient solutions for GDCNs of various scales. For small-scale GDCNs, we propose an analytical approach based on convex programming. For medium-scale GDCNs, we develop a distributed allocation algorithm exploiting the processing power of DCs in parallel. Afterward, we provide a novel low-complexity (decentralized) sub-graph extraction method, based on which we introduce cloud crawlers aiming to extract allocations of good potentials for large-scale GDCNs. Given these suggested strategies, we further investigate strategy selection under both fixed and adaptive DC pricing schemes, and propose an online learning algorithm for each.
We present distributed algorithms for training dynamic Graph Neural Networks (GNN) on large scale graphs spanning multi-node, multi-GPU systems. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first scaling study on dynamic GNN. We devise mechanisms for re ducing the GPU memory usage and identify two execution time bottlenecks: CPU-GPU data transfer; and communication volume. Exploiting properties of dynamic graphs, we design a graph difference-based strategy to significantly reduce the transfer time. We develop a simple, but effective data distribution technique under which the communication volume remains fixed and linear in the input size, for any number of GPUs. Our experiments using billion-size graphs on a system of 128 GPUs shows that: (i) the distribution scheme achieves up to 30x speedup on 128 GPUs; (ii) the graph-difference technique reduces the transfer time by a factor of up to 4.1x and the overall execution time by up to 40%
Software-defined internet of vehicles (SDIoV) has emerged as a promising paradigm to realize flexible and comprehensive resource management, for next generation automobile transportation systems. In this paper, a vehicular cloud computing-based SDIoV framework is studied wherein the joint allocation of transmission power and graph job is formulated as a nonlinear integer programming problem. To effectively address the problem, a structure-preservation-based two-stage allocation scheme is proposed that decouples template searching from power allocation. Specifically, a hierarchical tree-based random subgraph isomorphism mechanism is applied in the first stage by identifying potential mappings (templates) between the components of graph jobs and service providers. A structure-preserving simulated annealing-based power allocation algorithm is adopted in the second stage to achieve the trade-off between the job completion time and energy consumption. Extensive simulations are conducted to verify the performance of the proposed algorithms.
The dynamic scaling of distributed computations plays an important role in the utilization of elastic computational resources, such as the cloud. It enables the provisioning and de-provisioning of resources to match dynamic resource availability and demands. In the case of distributed graph processing, changing the number of the graph partitions while maintaining high partitioning quality imposes serious computational overheads as typically a time-consuming graph partitioning algorithm needs to execute each time repartitioning is required. In this paper, we propose a dynamic scaling method that can efficiently change the number of graph partitions while keeping its quality high. Our idea is based on two techniques: preprocessing and very fast edge partitioning, called graph edge ordering and chunk-based edge partitioning, respectively. The former converts the graph data into an ordered edge list in such a way that edges with high locality are closer to each other. The latter immediately divides the ordered edge list into an arbitrary number of high-quality partitions. The evaluation with the real-world billion-scale graphs demonstrates that our proposed approach significantly reduces the repartitioning time, while the partitioning quality it achieves is on par with that of the best existing static method.

الأسئلة المقترحة

التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا