JOURNAL ARTICLE

Grid Computing Workloads

Alexandru IosupDick Epema

Year: 2010 Journal:   IEEE Internet Computing Vol: 15 (2)Pages: 19-26   Publisher: IEEE Computer Society

Abstract

In the mid 1990s, the grid computing community promised the "compute power grid," a utility computing infrastructure for scientists and engineers. Since then, a variety of grids have been built worldwide, for academic purposes, specific application domains, and general production work. Understanding grid workloads is important for the design and tuning of future grid resource managers and applications, especially in the recent wake of commercial grids and clouds. This article presents an overview of the most important characteristics of grid workloads in the past seven years (2003-2010). Although grid user populations range from tens to hundreds of individuals, a few users dominate each grid's workload both in terms of consumed resources and the number of jobs submitted to the system. Real grid workloads include very few parallel jobs but many independent single-machine jobs (tasks) grouped into single "bags of tasks."

Keywords:
Computer science Grid Grid computing DRMAA Distributed computing Workload Semantic grid Variety (cybernetics) Data grid Resource (disambiguation) Cloud computing Power grid Power (physics) Operating system World Wide Web Computer network Artificial intelligence

Metrics

113
Cited By
14.84
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
16
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Distributed and Parallel Computing Systems
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
Scientific Computing and Data Management
Social Sciences →  Decision Sciences →  Information Systems and Management
Advanced Data Storage Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Networks and Communications
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