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The Kangaroo Approach to Data Movement on the Grid
San Francisco, California August 07-August 09
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/HPDC.2001.94520010th IEEE International Symposium on ...
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Douglas Thain, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jim Basney, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Se-Chang Son, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Miron Livny, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Abstract: Access to remote data is one of the principal challenges of grid computing. While performing I/O, grid applications must be prepared for server crashes, performance variations, and exhausted resources. To achieve high throughput in such a hostile environment, applications need a resilient service that moves data while hiding errors and latencies. We illustrate this idea with Kangaroo, a simple data movement system that makes opportunistic use of disks and networks to keep applications running. We demonstrate that Kangaroo can achieve better end-to-end performance than traditional data movement techniques, even though its individual components do not achieve high performance.
Citation:
Douglas Thain, Jim Basney, Se-Chang Son, Miron Livny, "The Kangaroo Approach to Data Movement on the Grid," hpdc, pp.0325, 10th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC-10 '01), 2001
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