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Take it to the limit

Noman Bashir, Nan Deng, Krzysztof Rzaḑca, David Irwin, Sree Kodak, Rohit Jnagal

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Abstract

To increase utilization, datacenter schedulers often overcommit resources where the sum of resources allocated to the tasks on a machine exceeds its physical capacity. Setting the right level of overcommitment is a challenging problem: low overcommitment leads to wasted resources, while high overcommitment leads to task performance degradation. In this paper, we take a first principles approach to designing and evaluating overcommit policies by asking a basic question: assuming complete knowledge of each task's future resource usage, what is the safest overcommit policy that yields the highest utilization? We call this policy the peak oracle. We then devise practical overcommit policies that mimic this peak oracle by predicting future machine resource usage. We simulate our overcommit policies using the recentlyreleased Google cluster trace, and show that they result in higher utilization and less overcommit errors than policies based on per-task allocations. We also deploy these policies to machines inside Google's datacenters serving its internal production workload. We show that our overcommit policies increase these machines' usable CPU capacity by 10-16% compared to no overcommitment.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceUSableWorkloadOracleTask (project management)Resource (disambiguation)Limit (mathematics)World Wide WebOperating systemSoftware engineeringComputer networkEconomicsMathematicsMathematical analysisManagementCloud Computing and Resource ManagementIoT and Edge/Fog ComputingAdvanced Data Storage Technologies
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