Performance of a trunk reservation policy in distributed data centres

2018 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 48-67
Author(s):  
Fabrice Guillemin ◽  
Guilherme Thompson
2019 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 07007
Author(s):  
Petr Fedchenkov ◽  
Andrey Shevel ◽  
Sergey Khoruzhnikov ◽  
Oleg Sadov ◽  
Oleg Lazo ◽  
...  

ITMO University (ifmo.ru) is developing the cloud of geographically distributed data centres. The geographically distributed means data centres (DC) located in different places far from each other by hundreds or thousands of kilometres. Usage of the geographically distributed data centres promises a number of advantages for end users such as opportunity to add additional DC and service availability through redundancy and geographical distribution. Services like data transfer, computing, and data storage are provided to users in the form of virtual objects including virtual machines, virtual storage, virtual data transfer link.


1996 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilze Ziedins

It is known that a threshold policy (or trunk reservation policy) is optimal for Erlang's loss system under certain assumptions. This paper examines the robustness of this policy under departures from the standard assumption of Poisson arrivals and shows that the optimal policy has a generalized trunk reservation form.


2010 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 5-9
Author(s):  
T. F. de Bruin

Abstract. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) and the Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research (SCOR) jointly intend to build a Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS). This paper addresses the required data flow infrastructure. SOOS will use a system of systems approach, using existing observation programmes and projects. Data should be submitted to professional data centres. The problem arises how to link all these data centres and get a central overview of the SOOS data as well as direct access to the data. The Netherlands National Oceanographic Data Committee (NL-NODC) has successfully built a national distributed oceanographic data acccess infrastructure, adopting and implementing technology developed by the European SeaDataNet project. The Dutch system has been operational since early 2009. The conclusion is that the SeaDataNet technology can be used to build an operational, distributed data delivery infrastructure, featuring all elements required by the Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS).


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 2972
Author(s):  
Marek Amanowicz ◽  
Damian Jankowski

The increasing availability of mobile devices and applications, the progress in virtualisation technologies, and advances in the development of cloud-based distributed data centres have significantly stimulated the growing interest in the use of software-defined networks (SDNs) for both wired and wireless applications. Standards-based software abstraction between the network control plane and the underlying data forwarding plane, including both physical and virtual devices, provides an opportunity to significantly increase network security. In this paper, to secure SDNs against intruders’ actions, we propose a comprehensive system that exploits the advantages of SDNs’ native features and implements data mining to detect and classify malicious flows in the SDN data plane. The architecture of the system and its mechanisms are described, with an emphasis on flow rule generation and flow classification. The concept was verified in the SDN testbed environment that reflects typical SDN flows. The experiments confirmed that the system can be successfully implemented in SDNs to mitigate threats caused by different malicious activities of intruders. The results show that our combination of data mining techniques provides better detection and classification of malicious flows than other solutions.


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