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Resources and Services Virtualization without Boundaries (RESERVOIR)

Resources and Services Virtualization without Boundaries (RESERVOIR). www.reservoir-fp7.eu. Alex Galis University College London a.galis@ee.ucl.ac.uk. The research leading to these results has been partially funded by the European

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Resources and Services Virtualization without Boundaries (RESERVOIR)

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  1. Resources and Services Virtualization without Boundaries (RESERVOIR) www.reservoir-fp7.eu Alex Galis University College London a.galis@ee.ucl.ac.uk • The research leading to these results has been partially funded by the European • Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement n° 215605.

  2. The RESERVOIR Vision • The Next Generation Infrastructure for Service Delivery • Provide revolutionary foundation for a new European infrastructure where resources and services can be transparently and dynamically managed, provisioned and relocated like utilities – virtually “without borders” • No single facility/provider can create a seemingly infinite infrastructure capable of serving massive amounts of users at all times, from all locations • Federation of clouds • Leverage the diversity factor to achieve economies of scale • Leverage locality • Analogies exists in areas outside services: • Electrical power delivery: capacity can be shifted to guarantee supply and lower costs • Roaming cellular communications: Talk wherever you are • Impact • Enable utility-like deployment of services, relieving the service consumer from awareness of the IT attributes while assuring QoS and security guarantees • Aim to create the basis for future service products

  3. Approach • Focus on technologies that enable to build cooperating computing clouds • Connect computing clouds to create an even bigger cloud • Integration of virtualization technologies with grid computing driven by new techniques for service management  The Service Oriented Infrastructure (SOI) equation: Grid-aware Virtualization Service-oriented capacity provisioning across sites Virtualization-aware Grid Optimal placement of VMs on a federated cloud Business & Service Management Policy-based management of service-level agreements SOI • Building on this equation we will architect and implement a platform for supporting complex services, which • Enables dynamic deployment of complex multi-tier services across heterogeneous administration domains • Uses virtualization of servers, storage and network to allow migration without borders • Supports service definition, SLA management, accounting and billing

  4. RESERVOIR Partners and Competencies

  5. The Reservoir Architecture • Monitor service and enforce SLA compliance by managing capacity of Service Components (VEEs) or/and size of Service Tiers • Deals with translation/mapping of service concepts/metrics (response time) to infrastructure concepts/metrics (VEE size) • Monitor VEEs and find best VEE placement that meet constraint satisfaction problem • Deals federation of domains

  6. Project Structure A4: Service Management A6: Dissemination A5: Testbed and Scenarios A1: Architecture A3: VEE Management A2: VEE Infrastructure

  7. A2: VEE Infrastructure • Virtual Machine Technologies (IBM) • Improve performance of VEE execution for typical RESERVOIR workloads • Provide VEEMS enablement layer for virtual machines • Relocation Enablement (IBM) • Network Virtualization • Storage Virtualization • Java Service Containers (Sun) • Provide VEEMS enablement layer for virtual java service containers

  8. A3: VEE Management • VEE Provisioning and Supervision (UCM) • Image management • Monitoring • Allocation Policy Management (Datamat) • Policy based placement and migration • Federation of Management Domains (UCM) • Built atop WSRF interfaces to access remote VEE Supervisors • Push new and leverage existing OGF/DMTF/OASIS standards • Interoperability between administrative domains and scheduling heuristics on federated and utility architectures.

  9. A4: Service Management • Service Definition (UCL) • Design a new service description language that will allow the description of service interfaces, service lifecycle, interface bindings to implementations, service deployment, SLA requirements for a service, rules for VEEs (re)configuration and (re)organisation and service components distribution and configuration • Revisit the service lifecycle definition to accommodate the influence of virtualisation • Extend tools available for service design (for example the Eclipse Web Tools Platform) • Standardize the service description language • Service Management (TID, UCL) • SLA monitoring across administrative domains and service-oriented architectures. • Integrate monitoring with resource allocation and scheduling and take explicit account of the potentially synchronous nature of service invocations. • Automatic deployment of services based on complex service definition • Accounting, Billing and Payment (TID) • Accounting and billing arrangements for outsourced services are based on raw machine resource consumption (CPU-time, storage capacity etc) • RESERVOIR will pursue the definition of a framework that allows accounting and billing in terms of the services that were completed, taking into consideration the quality of service that was provided.

  10. A5: Experimentation and Validation • Testbed (UniMe) • Create the necessary environment for testing and validation • Support the execution of use cases • Scenario 1: eGov application (Thales) • Automatic adjustment of resources and domains cooperation. • Scenario 2: SAP business application (SAP) • Business application oriented use cases and the opportunities to execute them on a flexible infrastructure. • Scenario 3: Utility computing (Sun) • Deploy arbitrary operating system and application stacks on remote resources. Provide secure and seamless access to them. Adjust resource allocation on-demand without the end user noticing disruption of service • Scenario 4: Telco application (TID) • Hosting web sites that deals with massive access (e.g., the Olympics games) • High degree of personalization and support for mashups

  11. Results so far • RESERVOIR Architecture http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/events/cf/item-display.cfm?id=583 • 10 presentations at conferences & workshops • 2 papers fully based on the IPR generated in the project + 5 papers partially based on the IPR generated in the project www.reservoir-fp7.eu

  12. http://ieee-virtual-museum.org/collection/event.php?id=3456876http://ieee-virtual-museum.org/collection/event.php?id=3456876 The US National Power Grid http://www.anl.gov/Media_Center/logos22-1/electricity.htm http://www.pbase.com/rbenny/image/29116201 The Burden Iron Works Water Wheel http://www.rootsweb.com/~nytigs/BurdenPayrollRecords.htm The Pearl Street Station The Evolution of the Power Grid • Make your own infrastructure • Not the company’s main business but a considerable competitive advantage • The utility industry • Metering • Limited reach • Reproducible (yet costly) • Efficient distribution • Federation of providers • The diversity factor • Economies of scale

  13. R E S E R V O I R http://www.by-star.net/techspeak/datacenter/ Google @ The Dulles, OR http://www.informationweek.com/galleries/showImage.jhtml?galleryID=62&imageID=13 http://www.smcplus.com/applications.asp?id=32 The Evolution of the Compute Grid “… today’s commercial cloudshave not been open and general purpose, but instead been mostly proprietary and specialized for the specific internal uses (e.g., large-scale data analysis) of the companies that developed them. The idea that we might want to enable interoperability between providers (as in the electric power grid) has not yet surfaced …” “…will move towards a mix of microproduction and large utilities, with increasing numbers of small-scale producersco-existing with large-scale regional producers, and load being distributed among them dynamically …” There’s Grid in then thar Clouds - Ian Foster • Make your own infrastructure • Not the company’s main business but a considerable competitive advantage • The utility industry • Metering • Limited reach • Reproducible (yet costly) • Efficient distribution • Federation of providers • The diversity factor • Economies of scale

  14. SOI: Grid Computing Grid node or Service Site Physical Resources Service Tasks

  15. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization Virtual Execution Environment (VEE) Improved isolation, Relax dependencies, Well defined billing units

  16. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM Policy 1: If possible keep VEEs fromthe same organization in the same physical box

  17. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM Policy 1: If possible keep VEEs fromthe same organization in the same physical box Policy 2: Turn off underutilized physical boxes

  18. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM Policy 1: If possible keep VEEs fromthe same organization in the same physical box Policy 2: Turn off underutilized physical boxes Local optimizations (within a single site): placement, power, etc.

  19. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM – Boundaries Policy 3: If possible keep VEEs in “owning” organization

  20. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM – Boundaries Policy 3: If possible keep VEEs in “owning” organization Policy 4: If possible keep VEEs in least number of external organizations

  21. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM – Boundaries Policy 3: If possible keep VEEs in “owning” organization Policy 4: If possible keep VEEs in least number of external organizations

  22. SOI: Grid Computing + Virtualization + BSM – Boundaries Policy 5: “Follow” the service customer Migration across sites  Global optimizations: placement, cost, bandwidth,etc.

  23. Virtualize the Network Create virtual networks connecting VEEs regardless of physical server location

  24. Virtualize the Network and the Storage Enable secure access to relevant data regardless of storage location

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