| ARPACI-DUSSEAU, R. H. Performance Availability for Networks of Workstations. PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1999. |
....behavior. Our perspective begins by first viewing availability as a spectrum, and not a binary metric. Systems can exist in a large number of degraded, but operational, states between down and 8 up. In fact, systems running in degraded states are probably more common than perfect systems [5], especially in the fast growing world of online service provision where economic pressures encourage deployment of less well tested commodity SMP and clusterbased servers rather than expensive fault tolerant machines. An availability metric must therefore capture these degraded states, measuring ....
R. Arpaci-Dusseau. Performance Availability for Networks of Workstations. Ph.D. Dissertation, U. C. Berkeley. December, 1999.
....computation into I O, rather than using disks as hosts. DataCutter [11] maps this stream model to the Grid and shows that different workloads require different numbers and placement of filter instances. DataCutter filters are statically placed and do not adapt to dynamic load imbalances. River [8 10] is a data flow programming environment for clusters that balances load in the presence of performance heterogeneity. River s distributed queue (DQ) allows consumers and producers to process data at different rates. The DQ relaxes ordering constraints for better performance, similar to our sets. ....
R. H. Arpaci-Dusseau. Performance Availability for Networks of Workstations. PhD thesis, Graduate Division of the University of California at Berkeley, 1999.
No context found.
ARPACI-DUSSEAU, R. H. Performance Availability for Networks of Workstations. PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1999.
No context found.
R. Arpaci-Dusseau. Performance Availability for Networks of Workstations. Ph.D. Dissertation, U. C. Berkeley. December, 1999.
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