Online Balanced Repartitioning
Distributed cloud applications, including batch processing, streaming, and scale-out databases, generate a significant amount of network traffic and a considerable fraction of their runtime is due to network activity. This paper initiates the study of deterministic algorithms for collocating frequently communicating nodes in a distributed networked systems in an online fashion. In particular, we introduce the Balanced RePartitioning (BRP) problem: Given an arbitrary sequence of pairwise communication requests between n nodes, with patterns that may change over time, the objective is to dynamically partition the nodes into ` clusters, each of size k, at a minimum cost. Every communication request needs to be served: if the communicating nodes are located in the same cluster, the request is served locally, at cost 0; if the nodes are located in different clusters, the request is served remotely using inter-cluster communication, at cost 1. The partitioning can be updated dynamically (i.e., repartitioned), by migrating nodes between clusters at cost α per node migration. The goal is to devise online algorithms which find a good trade-off between the communication and the migration cost, i.e., “rent” or “buy”, while maintaining partitions which minimize the number of inter-cluster communications. BRP features interesting connections to other well-known online problems. In particular, we show that scenarios with ` = 2 generalize online paging, and scenarios with k = 2 constitute a novel online version of maximum matching. We consider settings both with and without cluster-size augmentation. Somewhat surprisingly (and unlike online paging), we prove that any deterministic online algorithm has a competitive ratio of at least k, even with augmentation. Our main technical contribution is an O(k log k)-competitive deterministic algorithm for the setting with (constant) augmentation. This is attractive as, in contrast to `, k is likely to be small in practice. For the case of matching (k = 2), we present a constant competitive algorithm that does not rely on augmentation.
Top- Avin, Chen
- Loukas, Andreas
- Pacut, Maciej
- Schmid, Stefan
Category |
Paper in Conference Proceedings or in Workshop Proceedings (Paper) |
Event Title |
30th International Symposium on Distributed Computing (DISC) |
Divisions |
Communication Technologies |
Subjects |
Informatik Allgemeines |
Event Location |
Paris, France |
Event Type |
Conference |
Event Dates |
September 2016 |
Date |
2016 |
Export |