3rd International ICST Conference on Simulation Tools and Techniques

Research Article

Alea 2: job scheduling simulator

Download925 downloads
  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/ICST.SIMUTOOLS2010.8722,
        author={Dalibor Klus\^{a}cek and Hana  Rudov\^{a}},
        title={Alea 2: job scheduling simulator},
        proceedings={3rd International ICST Conference on Simulation Tools and Techniques},
        publisher={ICST},
        proceedings_a={SIMUTOOLS},
        year={2010},
        month={5},
        keywords={Grid cluster scheduling simulation GridSim},
        doi={10.4108/ICST.SIMUTOOLS2010.8722}
    }
    
  • Dalibor Klusácek
    Hana Rudová
    Year: 2010
    Alea 2: job scheduling simulator
    SIMUTOOLS
    ICST
    DOI: 10.4108/ICST.SIMUTOOLS2010.8722
Dalibor Klusácek1,*, Hana Rudová1,*
  • 1: Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University, Botanická 68a, Brno, Czech Republic.
*Contact email: xklusac@fi.muni.cz, hanka@fi.muni.cz

Abstract

This work describes the Grid and cluster scheduling simulator Alea 2 designed for study, testing and evaluation of various job scheduling techniques. This event-based simulator is able to deal with common problems related to the job scheduling like the heterogeneity of jobs, resources, and the dynamic runtime changes such as the arrivals of new jobs or the resource failures and restarts. The Alea 2 is based on the popular GridSim toolkit [31] and represents a major extension of the Alea simulator, developed in 2007 [16]. The extension covers both improved design, extended functionality as well as the improved scalability and the higher simulation speed. Finally, new visualization interface was introduced into the simulator. The main part of the simulator is a complex scheduler which incorporates several common scheduling algorithms working either on the queue or the schedule (plan) based principle. Additional data structures are used to maintain information about the resource status, the objective functions and for collection and visualization of the simulation results. Many typical objectives such as the machine usage, the average slowdown or the average response time are included. The paper concludes with an example of the Alea 2 execution using a real-life workload, discussing also the scalability of the simulator.