Acceleration of Data-Intensive Workflow Applications by Using File Access History

Miki Horiuchi, K. Taura
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Data I/O has been one of major bottlenecks in the execution of data-intensive workflow applications. Appropriate task scheduling of a workflow can achieve high I/O throughput by reducing remote data accesses. However, most such task scheduling algorithms require the user to explicitly describe files to be accessed by each job, typically by stage-in/stage-out directives in job description, where such annotations are at best tedious and sometime impossible. Thus, a more automated mechanism is necessary. In this paper, we propose a method for predicting input/output files of each job without user-supplied annotations. It predicts I/O files by collecting file access history in a profiling run prior to the production run. We implemented the proposed method in a workflow system GXP Make and a distributed file system Mogami. We evaluate our system with two real workflow applications. Our data-aware job scheduler increases the ratio of local file accesses from 50% to 75% in one application and from 23% to 45% in the other. As a result, it reduces the makespan of the two applications by 2.5% and 7.5%, respectively.
利用文件访问历史加速数据密集型工作流应用程序
数据I/O一直是执行数据密集型工作流应用程序的主要瓶颈之一。适当的工作流任务调度可以通过减少远程数据访问来实现高I/O吞吐量。然而,大多数这样的任务调度算法要求用户显式地描述每个作业要访问的文件,通常是通过作业描述中的分阶段进入/分阶段退出指令,这样的注释充其量是乏味的,有时是不可能的。因此,一个更加自动化的机制是必要的。在本文中,我们提出了一种无需用户提供注释来预测每个作业的输入/输出文件的方法。它通过在生产运行之前收集分析运行中的文件访问历史来预测I/O文件。我们在工作流系统GXP Make和分布式文件系统Mogami中实现了该方法。我们用两个真实的工作流应用程序来评估我们的系统。我们的数据感知作业调度器将一个应用程序中的本地文件访问比率从50%提高到75%,在另一个应用程序中从23%提高到45%。因此,它将两个应用程序的完工时间分别缩短了2.5%和7.5%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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