Artikel in Tagungsband INPROC-2015-14

Bibliograph.
Daten
Gómez Sáez, Santiago; Andrikopoulos, Vasilios; Hahn, Michael; Karastoyanova, Dimka; Leymann, Frank; Skouradaki, Marigianna; Vukojevic-Haupt, Karolina: Performance and Cost Evaluation for the Migration of a Scientific Workflow Infrastructure to the Cloud.
In: Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Cloud Computing and Service Science (CLOSER 2015).
Universität Stuttgart, Fakultät Informatik, Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik.
S. 352-361, englisch.
SciTePress, 20. Mai 2015.
Artikel in Tagungsband (Konferenz-Beitrag).
CR-Klassif.C.2.4 (Distributed Systems)
D.2.8 (Software Engineering Metrics)
D.2.11 (Software Engineering Software Architectures)
KeywordsWorkflow Simulation; eScience; IaaS; Performance Evaluation; Cost Evaluation; Cloud Migration
Kurzfassung

The success of the Cloud computing paradigm, together with the increase of Cloud providers and optimized Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) offerings have contributed to a raise in the number of research and industry communities that are strong supporters of migrating and running their applications in the Cloud. Focusing on eScience simulation-based applications, scientific workflows have been widely adopted in the last years, and the scientific workflow management systems have become strong candidates for being migrated to the Cloud. In this research work we aim at empirically evaluating multiple Cloud providers and their corresponding optimized and non-optimized IaaS offerings with respect to their offered performance, and its impact on the incurred monetary costs when migrating and executing a workflow-based simulation environment. The experiments show significant performance improvements and reduced monetary costs when executing the simulation environment in off-premise Clouds.

KontaktSantiago Gómez Sáez: santiago.gomez-saez@iaas.uni-stuttgart.de
Abteilung(en)Universität Stuttgart, Institut für Architektur von Anwendungssystemen
Projekt(e)ALLOW Ensembles
SimTech
BenchFlow
Eingabedatum25. März 2015
   Publ. Institut   Publ. Informatik