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Towards Transparent Throughput Elasticity for IaaS Cloud Storage: Exploring the Benefits of Adaptive Block-Level Caching

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  • Bogdan Nicolae

    (IBM Research, Dublin, Ireland)

  • Pierre Riteau

    (University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA)

  • Kate Keahey

    (Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL, USA)

Abstract

Storage elasticity on IaaS clouds is a crucial feature in the age of data-intensive computing, especially when considering fluctuations of I/O throughput. This paper provides a transparent solution that automatically boosts I/O bandwidth during peaks for underlying virtual disks, effectively avoiding over-provisioning without performance loss. The authors' proposal relies on the idea of leveraging short-lived virtual disks of better performance characteristics (and thus more expensive) to act during peaks as a caching layer for the persistent virtual disks where the application data is stored. Furthermore, they introduce a performance and cost prediction methodology that can be used both independently to estimate in advance what trade-off between performance and cost is possible, as well as an optimization technique that enables better cache size selection to meet the desired performance level with minimal cost. The authors demonstrate the benefits of their proposal both for microbenchmarks and for two real-life applications using large-scale experiments.

Suggested Citation

  • Bogdan Nicolae & Pierre Riteau & Kate Keahey, 2015. "Towards Transparent Throughput Elasticity for IaaS Cloud Storage: Exploring the Benefits of Adaptive Block-Level Caching," International Journal of Distributed Systems and Technologies (IJDST), IGI Global, vol. 6(4), pages 21-44, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:igg:jdst00:v:6:y:2015:i:4:p:21-44
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