757 lines
34 KiB
TeX
757 lines
34 KiB
TeX
\documentclass{usiinfbachelorproject}
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\captionsetup{labelfont={bf}}
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\title{Understanding and Comparing Unsuccessful Executions in Large Datacenters}
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%\subtitle{The (optional) subtitle}
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\author{Claudio Maggioni}
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\versiondate{\today}
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\begin{committee}
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\advisor[Universit\`a della Svizzera Italiana,
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Switzerland]{Prof.}{Walter}{Binder}
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\assistant[Universit\`a della Svizzera Italiana,
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Switzerland]{Dr.}{Andrea}{Ros\'a}
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\end{committee}
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\abstract{The project aims at comparing two different traces coming from large
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datacenters, focusing in particular on unsuccessful executions of jobs and
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tasks submitted by users. The objective of this project is to compare the
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resource waste caused by unsuccessful executions, their impact on application
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performance, and their root causes. We will show the strong negative impact on
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CPU and RAM usage and on task slowdown. We will analyze patterns of
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unsuccessful jobs and tasks, particularly focusing on their interdependency.
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Moreover, we will uncover their root causes by inspecting key workload and
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system attributes such asmachine locality and concurrency level.}
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\begin{document}
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\maketitle
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\tableofcontents
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\newpage
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\section{Introduction} In today's world there is an ever growing demand for
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efficient, large scale computations. The rising trend of ``big data'' put the
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need for efficient management of large scaled parallelized computing at an all
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time high. This fact also increases the demand for research in the field of
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distributed systems, in particular in how to schedule computations effectively,
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avoid wasting resources and avoid failures.
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In 2011 Google released a month long data trace of their own cluster management
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system\cite{google-marso-11} \textit{Borg}, containing a lot of data regarding
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scheduling, priority management, and failures of a real production workload.
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This data was 2009
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This data was the foundation of the 2015 Ros\'a et al.\ paper
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\textit{Understanding the Dark Side of Big Data Clusters: An Analysis beyond
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Failures}\cite{vino-paper}, which in its many conclusions highlighted the need
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for better cluster management highlighting the high amount of failures found in
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the traces.
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In 2019 Google released an updated version of the \textit{Borg} cluster
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traces\cite{google-marso-19}, not only containing data from a far bigger
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workload due to improvements in computational technology, but also providing
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data from 8 different \textit{Borg} cells from datacenters located all over the
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world. These new traces are therefore about 100 times larger than the old
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traces, weighing in terms of storage spaces approximately 8TiB (when compressed
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and stored in JSONL format)\cite{google-drive-marso}, requiring a considerable
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amount of computational power to analyze them and the implementation of special
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data engineering techniques for analysis of the data.
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\input{figures/machine_configs}
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An overview of the machine configurations in the cluster analyzed with the 2011
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traces and in the 8 clusters composing the 2019 traces can be found in
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figure~\ref{fig:machineconfigs}. Additionally, in
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figure~\ref{fig:machineconfigs-csts}, the same machine configuration data is
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provided for the 2019 traces providing a cluster-by-cluster distribution of the
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machines.
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This project aims to repeat the analysis performed in 2015 to highlight
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similarities and differences in workload this decade brought, and expanding the
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old analysis to understand even better the causes of failures and how to prevent
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them. Additionally, this report will provide an overview on the data engineering
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techniques used to perform the queries and analyses on the 2019 traces.
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\section{Background information}
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\textit{Borg} is Google's own cluster management software able to run
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thousands of different jobs. Among the various cluster management services it
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provides, the main ones are: job queuing, scheduling, allocation, and
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deallocation due to higher priority computations.
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The core structure of Borg is a cell, a set of
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machines usually all within the same cluster, whose work is allocated by the
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same cluster-management system and hence a cell is handled as a unit. Each
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cell may run large computational workload that is submitted to Borg. Such
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workload is called ``job'', which outlines the computations that a user wants
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to run and is made up of several ``tasks''. A task is an executable program,
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consisting of multiple processes, which has to be run on a single machine.
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Those tasks may be ran sequentially or in parallel, and the condition for a
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job's successful termination is nontrivial.
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% Both tasks and jobs lifecyles are represented by several events, which are
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% encoded and stored in the trace as rows of various tables. Among the
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% information events provide, the field ``type'' provides information on the
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% execution status of the job or task. This field can have several values,
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% which are illustrated in figure~\ref{fig:eventtypes}.
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\subsection{Traces}
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The data relative to the events happening while Borg cell
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processes the workload is then encoded and stored as rows of several tables that
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make up a single usage trace. Such data comes from the information obtained by
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the cell's management system and single machines that make up the cell. Each
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table is identified by a key, usually a timestamp.
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In general events can be of two kinds, there are events that are relative to the
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status of the schedule, and there are other events that are relative to the
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status of a task itself.
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% \subsection{Rosà et al.~2015 DSN paper}
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In 2015, Dr.~Andrea Rosà, Lydia Y. Chen and Prof.~Walter Binder published a
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research paper titled \textit{Understanding the Dark Side of Big Data Clusters:
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An Analysis beyond Failures}\cite{vino-paper} in which they performed several
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analysis on unsuccessful executions in the Google's 2011 Borg cluster traces
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with the aim of identifying their resource waste, their impacts on the
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performance of the application, and any causes that may lie behind such
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failures. The salient conclusion of that research is that actually lots of
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computations performed by Google would eventually end in failure, then leading
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to large amounts of computational power being wasted.
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\begin{figure}[h]
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\begin{center}
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\begin{tabular}{p{3cm}p{12cm}}
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\toprule
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\textbf{Type code} & \textbf{Description} \\
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\midrule
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% SUGGERIMENTO, NON CANCELLARE MAI, A MENO CHE NON SONO COSE COMPLETAMENTE
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% INUTILI, IN MOLTI CASI VA BENE COMMENTARE, INTANTO NON INFLUISCONO CON LA
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% COMPILAZIONE.
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% \texttt{QUEUE} & The job or task was marked not eligible for scheduling
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% by Borg's scheduler, and thus Borg will move the job/task in a long
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% wait queue\\
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% \texttt{SUBMIT} & The job or task was submitted to Borg for execution\\
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% \texttt{ENABLE} & The job or task became eligible for scheduling\\
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% \texttt{SCHEDULE} & The job or task's execution started\\
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\texttt{EVICT} & The job or task was terminated in order to free
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computational resources for an higher priority job\\
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\texttt{FAIL} & The job or task terminated its execution unsuccesfully
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due to a failure\\
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\texttt{FINISH} & The job or task terminated succesfully\\
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\texttt{KILL} & The job or task terminated its execution because of a
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manual request to stop it\\
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% \texttt{LOST} & It is assumed a job or task is has been terminated, but
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% due to missing data there is insufficent information to identify when
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% or how\\
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% \texttt{UPDATE\_PENDING} & The metadata (scheduling class, resource
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% requirements, \ldots) of the job/task was updated while the job was
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% waiting to be scheduled\\
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% \texttt{UPDATE\_RUNNING} & The metadata (scheduling class, resource
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% requirements, \ldots) of the job/task was updated while the job was in
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% execution\\
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\bottomrule
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\end{tabular}
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\end{center}
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\caption{Overview of job and task event types.}\label{fig:eventtypes}
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\end{figure}
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Figure~\ref{fig:eventTypes} shows the expected transitions between event
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types.
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\begin{figure}[h]
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\centering
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\resizebox{\textwidth}{!}{%
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\includegraphics{./figures/event_types.png}}
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\caption{Typical transitions between task/job event types according to
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Google\label{fig:eventTypes}}
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\end{figure}
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\hypertarget{traces-contents}{%
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\subsection{Traces contents}\label{traces-contents}}
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The traces provided by Google contain mainly a collection of job and
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task events spanning a month of execution of the 8 different clusters.
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In addition to this data, some additional data on the machines'
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configuration in terms of resources (i.e.~amount of CPU and RAM) and
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additional machine-related metadata.
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Due to Google's policy, most identification related data (like job/task
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IDs, raw resource amounts and other text values) were obfuscated prior
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to the release of the traces. One obfuscation that is noteworthy in the
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scope of this thesis is related to CPU and RAM amounts, which are
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expressed respetively in NCUs (\emph{Normalized Compute Units}) and NMUs
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(\emph{Normalized Memory Units}).
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NCUs and NMUs are defined based on the raw machine resource
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distributions of the machines within the 8 clusters. A machine having 1
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NCU CPU power and 1 NMU memory size has the maximum amount of raw CPU
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power and raw RAM size found in the clusters. While RAM size is measured
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in bytes for normalization purposes, CPU power was measured in GCU
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(\emph{Google Compute Units}), a proprietary CPU power measurement unit
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used by Google that combines several parameters like number of
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processors and cores, clock frequency, and architecture (i.e.~ISA).
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\hypertarget{overview-of-traces-format}{%
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\subsection{Overview of traces'
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format}\label{overview-of-traces-format}}
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The traces have a collective size of approximately 8TiB and are stored
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in a Gzip-compressed JSONL (JSON lines) format, which means that each
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table is represented by a single logical ``file'' (stored in several
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file segments) where each carriage return separated line represents a
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single record for that table.
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There are namely 5 different table ``files'':
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\begin{description}
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\item[\texttt{machine\_configs},] which is a table containing each physical
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machine's configuration and its evolution over time;
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\item[\texttt{instance\_events},] which is a table of task events;
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\item[\texttt{collection\_events},] which is a table of job events;
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\item[\texttt{machine\_attributes},] which is a table containing (obfuscated)
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metadata about each physical machine and its evolution over time;
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\item[\texttt{instance\_usage},] which contains resource (CPU/RAM) measures
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of jobs and tasks running on the single machines.
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\end{description}
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The scope of this thesis focuses on the tables
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\texttt{machine\_configs}, \texttt{instance\_events} and
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\texttt{collection\_events}.
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\hypertarget{remark-on-traces-size}{%
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\subsection{Remark on traces size}\label{remark-on-traces-size}}
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While the 2011 Google Borg traces were relatively small, with a total
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size in the order of the tens of gigabytes, the 2019 traces are quite
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challenging to analyze due to their sheer size. As stated before, the
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traces have a total size of 8 TiB when stored in the format provided by
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Google. Even when broken down to table ``files'', unitary sizes still
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reach the single tebibyte mark (namely for \texttt{machine\_configs},
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the largest table in the trace).
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Due to this constraints, a careful data engineering based approach was
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used when reproducing the 2015 DSN paper analysis. Bleeding edge data
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science technologies like Apache Spark were used to achieve efficient
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and parallelized computations. This approach is discussed with further
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detail in the following section.
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\hypertarget{project-requirements-and-analysis}{%
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\section{Project requirements and
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analysis}\label{project-requirements-and-analysis}}
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\textbf{TBD} (describe our objective with this analysis in detail)
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The aim of this thesis is to repeat the analysis performed in 2015 on the
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dataset Google has released in 2019 in order to find similarities and
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differences with the previous analysis, and ultimately find whether
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computational power is indeed wasted in this new workload as well. The 2019 data
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comes from 8 Borg cells spanning 8 different datacenters located in different
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geographical positions, all focused on computational oriented workloads. The
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data collection time span matches the entire month of May 2019.
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\hypertarget{analysis-methodology}{%
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\section{Analysis methodology}\label{analysis-methodology}}
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Due to the inherent complexity in analyzing traces of this size, novel
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bleeding-edge data engineering tecniques were adopted to performed the required
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computations. We used the framework Apache Spark to perform efficient and
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parallel Map-Reduce computations. In this section, we discuss the technical
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details behind our approach.
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\hypertarget{introduction-on-apache-spark}{%
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\subsection{Introduction on Apache
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Spark}\label{introduction-on-apache-spark}}
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Apache Spark is a unified analytics engine for large-scale data
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processing. In layman's terms, Spark is really useful to parallelize
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computations in a fast and streamlined way.
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In the scope of this thesis, Spark was used essentially as a Map-Reduce
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framework for computing aggregated results on the various tables. Due to
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the sharded nature of table ``files'', Spark is able to spawn a thread
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per file and run computations using all processors on the server
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machines used to run the analysis.
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Spark is also quite powerful since it provides automated thread pooling
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services, and it is able to efficiently store and cache intermediate
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computation on secondary storage without any additional effort required
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from the data engineer. This feature was especially useful due to the
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sheer size of the analyzed data, since the computations required to
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store up to 1TiB of intermediate data on disk.
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The chosen programming language for writing analysis scripts was Python.
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Spark has very powerful native Python bindings in the form of the
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\emph{PySpark} API, which were used to implement the various queries.
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\hypertarget{query-architecture}{%
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\subsection{Query architecture}\label{query-architecture}}
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\subsubsection{Overview}
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In general, each query written to execute the analysis
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follows a general Map-Reduce template.
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Traces are first read, then parsed, and then filtered by performing selections,
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projections and computing new derived fields. After this preparation phase, the
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trace records are often passed through a \texttt{groupby()} operation, which by
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choosing one or many record fields sorts all the records into several ``bins''
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containing records with matching values for the selected fields. Then, a map
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operation is applied to each bin in order to derive some aggregated property
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value for each grouping. Finally, a reduce operation is applied to either
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further aggregate those computed properties or to generate an aggregated data
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structure for storage purposes.
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\subsubsection{Parsing table files}
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As stated before, table ``files'' are composed of several Gzip-compressed
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shards of JSONL record data. The specification for the types and constraints
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of each record is outlined by Google in the form of a protobuffer specification
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file found in the trace release
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package\cite{google-proto-marso}. This file was used as
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the oracle specification and was a critical reference for writing the query
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code that checks, parses and carefully sanitizes the various JSONL records
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prior to actual computations.
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The JSONL encoding of traces records is often performed with non-trivial rules
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that required careful attention. One of these involved fields that have a
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logically-wise ``zero'' value (i.e.~values like ``0'' or the empty string). For
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these values the key-value pair in the JSON object is outright omitted. When
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reading the traces in Apache Spark is therefore necessary to check for this
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possibility and insert back the omitted record attributes.
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\subsubsection{The queries}
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Most queries use only two or three fields in each trace records, while the
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original table records often are made of a couple of dozen fields. In order to save
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memory during the query, a projection is often applied to the data by the means
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of a \texttt{.map()} operation over the entire trace set, performed using
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Spark's RDD API.
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Another operation that is often necessary to perform prior to the Map-Reduce
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core of each query is a record filtering process, which is often motivated by
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the presence of incomplete data (i.e.~records which contain fields whose values
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is unknown). This filtering is performed using the \texttt{.filter()} operation
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of Spark's RDD API.
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The core of each query is often a \texttt{groupby()} followed by a
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\texttt{map()} operation on the aggregated data. The \texttt{groupby()} groups
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the set of all records into several subsets of records each having something in
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common. Then, each of this small clusters is reduced with a \texttt{map()}
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operation to a single record. The motivation behind this way of computing data
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is that for the analysis in this thesis it is often necessary to analyze the
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behaviour w.r.t. time of either task or jobs by looking at their events. These
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queries are therefore implemented by \texttt{groupby()}-ing records by task or
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job, and then \texttt{map()}-ing each set of event records sorting them by time
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and performing the desired computation on the obtained chronological event log.
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Sometimes intermediate results are saved in Spark's parquet format in order to
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compute and save intermediate results beforehand.
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\subsection{Query script design}
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In this section we aim to show the general complexity behind the implementations
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of query scripts by explaining in detail some sampled scripts to better
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appreciate their behaviour.
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\subsubsection{The ``task slowdown'' query script}
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One example of analysis script with average complexity and a pretty
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straightforward structure is the pair of scripts \texttt{task\_slowdown.py} and
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\texttt{task\_slowdown\_table.py} used to compute the ``task slowdown'' tables
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(namely the tables in figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown}).
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``Slowdown'' is a task-wise measure of wasted execution time for tasks with a
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\texttt{FINISH} termination type. It is computed as the total execution time of
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the task divided by the execution time actually needed to complete the task
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(i.e. the total time of the last execution attempt, successful by definition).
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The analysis requires to compute the mean task slowdown for each task priority
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value, and additionally compute the percentage of tasks with successful
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terminations per priority. The query therefore needs to compute the execution
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time of each execution attempt for each task, determine if each task has
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successful termination or not, and finally combine this data to compute
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slowdown, mean slowdown and ultimately the final table found in
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figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown}.
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\begin{figure}[h]
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\centering
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\includegraphics[width=.75\textwidth]{figures/task_slowdown_query.png}
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\caption{Diagram of the script used for the ``task slowdown''
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query.}\label{fig:taskslowdownquery}
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\end{figure}
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Figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdownquery} shows a schematic representation of the query
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structure.
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The query first starts reading the \texttt{instance\_events} table, which
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contains (among other data) all task event logs containing properties, event
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types and timestamps. As already explained in the previous section, the logical
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table file is actually stored as several Gzip-compressed JSONL shards. This is
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very useful for processing purposes, since Spark is able to parse and load in
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memory each shard in parallel, i.e. using all processing cores on the server
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used to run the queries.
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After loading the data, a selection and a projection operation are performed in
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the preparation phase so as to ``clean up'' the records and fields that are not
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needed, leaving only useful information to feed in the ``group by'' phase. In
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this query, the selection phase removes all records that do not represent task
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events or that contain an unknown task ID or a null event timestamp. In the 2019
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traces it is quite common to find incomplete records, since the log process is
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unable to capture the sheer amount of events generated by all jobs in a exact
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and deterministic fashion.
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Then, after the preparation stage is complete, the task event records are
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grouped in several bins, one per task ID\@. Performing this operation the
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collection of unsorted task event types is rearranged to form groups of task
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events all relating to a single task.
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These obtained collections of task events are then sorted by timestamp and
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processed to compute intermediate data relating to execution attempt times and
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task termination counts. After the task events are sorted, the script iterates
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over the events in chronological order, storing each execution attempt time and
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registering all execution termination types by checking the event type field.
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The task termination is then equal to the last execution termination type,
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following the definition originally given in the 2015 Ros\'a et al. DSN paper.
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If the task termination is determined to be unsuccessful, the tally counter of
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task terminations for the matching task property is increased. Otherwise, all
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the task termination attempt time deltas are returned. Tallies and time deltas
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are saved in an intermediate time file for fine-grained processing.
|
|
|
|
Finally, the \texttt{task\_slowdown\_table.py} processes this intermediate
|
|
results to compute the percentage of successful tasks per execution and
|
|
computing slowdown values given the previously computed execution attempt time
|
|
deltas. Finally, the mean of the computed slowdown values is computed resulting
|
|
in the clear and coincise tables found in figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown}.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Analysis: Performance Input of Unsuccessful Executions}
|
|
\input{figures/machine_time_waste}
|
|
|
|
Our first investigation focuses on replicating the methodologies used in the
|
|
2015 DSN Ros\'a et al.\ paper\cite{vino-paper} regarding usage of machine time
|
|
and resources.
|
|
|
|
In this section we perform several analyses focusing on how machine time and
|
|
resources are wasted, by means of a temporal vs. spatial resource analysis from
|
|
the perspective of single tasks as well as jobs. We then compare the results
|
|
from the 2019 traces to the ones that were obtained in 2015 to understand the
|
|
workload evolution inside Borg between 2011 and 2019.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Temporal Impact: Machine Time Waste}
|
|
|
|
This analysis explores how machine time is distributed over task events and
|
|
submissions. By partitioning the collection of all terminating tasks by their
|
|
termination event, the analysis aims to measure the total time spent by tasks in
|
|
3 different execution phases:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[resubmission time:] the total of all time deltas between every task
|
|
termination event and the immediately succeding task submission event, i.e.
|
|
the total time spent by tasks waiting to be resubmitted in Borg after a
|
|
termination;
|
|
\item[queue time:] the total of all time deltas between every task submission
|
|
event and the following task scheduling event, i.e. the total time spent by
|
|
tasks queuing before execution;
|
|
\item[running time:] the total of all time deltas between every task scheduling
|
|
event and the following task termination event, i.e. the total time spent by
|
|
tasks ``executing'' (i.e. performing useful computations) in the clusters.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
In the 2019 traces, an additional ``Unknown'' measure is counted. This measure
|
|
collects all the times in which the event transitions between the register
|
|
events do not allow to safely assume in which execution phase a task may be.
|
|
Unknown measures are mostly caused by faults and missed event writes in the task
|
|
event log that was used to generate the traces.
|
|
|
|
The analysis results are depicted in figure~\ref{fig:machinetimewaste-rel} as a
|
|
comparison between the 2011 and 2019 traces, aggregating the data from all
|
|
clusters. Additionally, in figure~\ref{fig:machinetimewaste-rel-csts}
|
|
cluster-by-cluster breakdown result is provided for the 2019 traces.
|
|
|
|
The striking difference between 2011 and 2019 data is in the machine time
|
|
distribution per task termination type. In the 2019 traces, 94.38\% of global
|
|
machine time is spent on tasks that are eventually \texttt{KILL}ed.
|
|
\texttt{FINISH}, \texttt{EVICT} and \texttt{FAIL} tasks respectively register
|
|
totals of 4.20\%, 1.18\% and 0.25\% machine time, maintaining a analogous
|
|
distribution between them to their distribution in the 2011 traces.
|
|
|
|
Considering instead the distribution between execution phase times, the
|
|
comparison shows very similar behaviour between the two traces, having the
|
|
``Running'' time being dominant (at a total of 16.63\% across task terminations
|
|
in 2019) over the queue and resubmission phases (with respective totals in 2019
|
|
of 3.26\% and 0.004\%).
|
|
|
|
However, another noteworthy difference between 2011 and 2019 data lies in the new
|
|
``Unknown'' trace dataset present only in the latter traces, registering a total
|
|
80.12\% of global machine time across al terminations. This data can be
|
|
interpreted as a strong indication of the ``poor quality'' of the 2019 traces
|
|
w.r.t.\ of accuracy of task event logging.
|
|
|
|
Considering instead the behaviour of each single cluster in the 2019 traces, no
|
|
significant difference beween them can be observed. The only notable difference
|
|
lies between the ``Running time``-``Unknown time'' ratio in \texttt{KILL}ed
|
|
tasks, which is at its highest in cluster A (at 30.78\% by 58.71\% of global
|
|
machine time) and at its lowest in cluster H (at 8.06\% by 84.77\% of global
|
|
machine time).
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Average Slowdown per Task}
|
|
\input{figures/task_slowdown}
|
|
|
|
This analysis aims to measure the figure of ``slowdown'', which is defined as
|
|
the ratio between the response time (i.e\. queue time and running time) of the
|
|
last execution of a given task and the total response time across all
|
|
executions of said task. This metric is especially useful to analyze the impact
|
|
of unsuccesful executions on each task total execution time w.r.t.\ the intrinsic
|
|
workload (i.e.\ computational time) of tasks.
|
|
|
|
Refer to figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown} for a comparison between the 2011 and
|
|
2019 mean task slowdown measures broke down by task priority. Additionally, said
|
|
means are computed on a cluster-by-cluster basis for 2019 data in
|
|
figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown-csts}.
|
|
|
|
In 2015 Ros\'a et al.\cite{vino-paper} measured mean task slowdown per each task
|
|
priority value, which at the time were $[0,11]$ numeric values. However,
|
|
in 2019 traces, task priorities are given as a $[0,500]$ numeric value.
|
|
Therefore, to allow for an easier comparison, mean task slowdown values are
|
|
computed by task priority tier over the 2019 data. Priority tiers are
|
|
semantically relevant priority ranges defined in the Tirmazi et al.
|
|
2020\cite{google-marso-19} that introduced the 2019 traces. Equivalent priority
|
|
tiers are also provided next to the 2011 priority values in the table covering
|
|
the 2015 analysis.
|
|
|
|
In the given tables, the \textbf{\% finished} column corresponds to the
|
|
percentage of \texttt{FINISH}ed tasks for that priority or tier. \textbf{Mean
|
|
response [s] (last execution)} instead shows the mean response time of the last
|
|
task execution of each task in that priority/tier.
|
|
\textbf{Mean response [s] (all executions)} provides a very similar figure,
|
|
though this column shows the mean response time across all executions.
|
|
\textbf{Mean slowdown} instead provides the mean slowdown value for each task
|
|
priority/tier.
|
|
|
|
Comparing the tables in figure~\ref{fig:taskslowdown} we observe that the
|
|
maximum mean slowdown measure for 2019 data (i.e.\ 7.84, for the BEB tier) is almost
|
|
double of the maximum measure in 2011 data (i.e.\ 3.39, for priority $3$
|
|
corresponding to the BEB tier). The ``Best effort batch'' tier, as the name
|
|
suggest, is a lower priority tier where failures are more tolerated. Therefore,
|
|
due to the increased concurrency in the 2019 clusters compared to 2011 and the
|
|
higher machine time spent for unsuccesful executions (as observed in the
|
|
previous analysis) and increase slowdown rate for this class is not particularly
|
|
surprising.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
The \% of finishing jobs is relatively low comparing with the 2011
|
|
traces.
|
|
|
|
\input{figures/spatial_resource_waste}
|
|
\input{figures/table_iii} % has table III and table IV in it
|
|
\input{figures/figure_5}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{reserved-and-actual-resource-usage-of-tasks}{%
|
|
\subsection{Reserved and actual resource usage of
|
|
tasks}\label{reserved-and-actual-resource-usage-of-tasks}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Refer to figures \ref{fig:spatialresourcewaste-actual} and
|
|
\ref{fig:spatialresourcewaste-requested}.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
Most (mesasured and requested) resources are used by killed job, even
|
|
more than in the 2011 traces.
|
|
\item
|
|
Behaviour is rather homogeneous across datacenters, with the exception
|
|
of cluster G where a lot of LOST-terminated tasks acquired 70\% of
|
|
both CPU and RAM
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Refer to figure \ref{fig:tableIII}.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
The mean number of events per task is an order of magnitude higher
|
|
than in the 2011 traces
|
|
\item
|
|
Generally speaking, the event type with higher mean is the termination
|
|
event for the task
|
|
\item
|
|
The \# evts mean is higher than the sum of all other event type means,
|
|
since it appears there are a lot more non-termination events in the
|
|
2019 traces.
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{mean-number-of-tasks-and-event-distribution-per-job-type}{%
|
|
\subsection{Mean number of tasks and event distribution per job
|
|
type}\label{mean-number-of-tasks-and-event-distribution-per-job-type}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
Again the mean number of tasks is significantly higher than the 2011
|
|
traces, indicating a higher complexity of workloads
|
|
\item
|
|
Cluster A has no evicted jobs
|
|
\item
|
|
The number of events is however lower than the event means in the 2011
|
|
traces
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{probability-of-task-successful-termination-given-its-unsuccesful-events}{%
|
|
\subsection{Probability of task successful termination given its
|
|
unsuccesful
|
|
events}\label{probability-of-task-successful-termination-given-its-unsuccesful-events}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Refer to figure \ref{fig:figureV}.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
Behaviour is very different from cluster to cluster
|
|
\item
|
|
There is no easy conclusion, unlike in 2011, on the correlation
|
|
between succesful probability and \# of events of a specific type.
|
|
\item
|
|
Clusters B, C and D in particular have very unsmooth lines that vary a
|
|
lot for small \# evts differences. This may be due to an uneven
|
|
distribution of \# evts in the traces.
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
\hypertarget{correlation-between-task-events-metadata-and-task-termination}{%
|
|
\subsection{Correlation between task events' metadata and task
|
|
termination}\label{correlation-between-task-events-metadata-and-task-termination}}
|
|
|
|
\input{figures/figure_7}
|
|
|
|
Refer to figures \ref{fig:figureVII-a}, \ref{fig:figureVII-b}, and
|
|
\ref{fig:figureVII-c}.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
No smooth curves in this figure either, unlike 2011 traces
|
|
\item
|
|
The behaviour of curves for 7a (priority) is almost the opposite of
|
|
2011, i.e. in-between priorities have higher kill rates while
|
|
priorities at the extremum have lower kill rates. This could also be
|
|
due bt the inherent distribution of job terminations;
|
|
\item
|
|
Event execution time curves are quite different than 2011, here it
|
|
seems there is a good correlation between short task execution times
|
|
and finish event rates, instead of the U shape curve in 2015 DSN
|
|
\item
|
|
In figure \ref{fig:figureVII-b} cluster behaviour seems quite uniform
|
|
\item
|
|
Machine concurrency seems to play little role in the event termination
|
|
distribution, as for all concurrency factors the kill rate is at 90\%.
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{correlation-between-task-events-resource-metadata-and-task-termination}{%
|
|
\subsection{Correlation between task events' resource metadata and task
|
|
termination}\label{correlation-between-task-events-resource-metadata-and-task-termination}}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{correlation-between-job-events-metadata-and-job-termination}{%
|
|
\subsection{Correlation between job events' metadata and job
|
|
termination}\label{correlation-between-job-events-metadata-and-job-termination}}
|
|
|
|
\input{figures/figure_9}
|
|
|
|
Refer to figures \ref{fig:figureIX-a}, \ref{fig:figureIX-b}, and
|
|
\ref{fig:figureIX-c}.
|
|
|
|
\textbf{Observations}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item
|
|
Behaviour between cluster varies a lot
|
|
\item
|
|
There are no ``smooth'' gradients in the various curves unlike in the
|
|
2011 traces
|
|
\item
|
|
Killed jobs have higher event rates in general, and overall dominate
|
|
all event rates measures
|
|
\item
|
|
There still seems to be a correlation between short execution job
|
|
times and successfull final termination, and likewise for kills and
|
|
higher job terminations
|
|
\item
|
|
Across all clusters, a machine locality factor of 1 seems to lead to
|
|
the highest success event rate
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{mean-number-of-tasks-and-event-distribution-per-task-type}{%
|
|
\subsection{Mean number of tasks and event distribution per task
|
|
type}\label{mean-number-of-tasks-and-event-distribution-per-task-type}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{potential-causes-of-unsuccesful-executions}{%
|
|
\subsection{Potential causes of unsuccesful
|
|
executions}\label{potential-causes-of-unsuccesful-executions}}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{implementation-issues-analysis-limitations}{%
|
|
\section{Implementation issues -- Analysis
|
|
limitations}\label{implementation-issues-analysis-limitations}}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{discussion-on-unknown-fields}{%
|
|
\subsection{Discussion on unknown
|
|
fields}\label{discussion-on-unknown-fields}}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{limitation-on-computation-resources-required-for-the-analysis}{%
|
|
\subsection{Limitation on computation resources required for the
|
|
analysis}\label{limitation-on-computation-resources-required-for-the-analysis}}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{other-limitations}{%
|
|
\subsection{Other limitations \ldots{}}\label{other-limitations}}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
|
|
\hypertarget{conclusions-and-future-work-or-possible-developments}{%
|
|
\section{Conclusions and future work or possible
|
|
developments}\label{conclusions-and-future-work-or-possible-developments}}
|
|
|
|
\textbf{TBD}
|
|
|
|
\printbibliography
|
|
|
|
\end{document}
|
|
% vim: set ts=2 sw=2 et tw=80:
|