Abstract
This paper discusses the requirements for and functionalities of resource management systems for future generation Grids. To this end it is also necessary to review the actual scope of future Grids. Here we examine differences and similarities of current Grid systems and distinguish several Grid scenarios to highlight the different understandings of the term Grid which exist today. While we expect that a generic Grid infrastructure cannot suite all application scenarios, it would certainly be beneficial to many of them to share such an infrastructure. Instead of identifying a minimal subset of necessary Grid middleware functionalities, we postulate that Grids need a resource management system both well-designed and rich in features to be usable for a large variety of applications. This includes for example extended functionalities for information and negotiation services which can be used by automatic scheduling and brokering solutions.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
I. Foster and C. Kesselman, eds. The GRID: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure. Morgan Kaufmann, 1998.
I. Foster. What is the Grid? A Three Point Checklist. GRIDToday 1(6), July 21, 2002.
J. Schopf and B. Nitzberg. Grids: Top Ten Questions. Scientific Programming, special issue on Grid Computing. 10(2):103–111, Aug., 2002.
K. Jeffery, et al. Next Generation Grids 2 — Requirements and Options for European Grids Research 2005–2010 and Beyond. July, 2004. Online: ftp://ftp.cordis.lu/pub/ist/docs/ngg2_eg_final.pdf.
J. Nabrzyski, J. Schopf and J. Weglarz, eds. Grid Resource Management-State of the Art and Future Trends. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2004.
N. Davies, A. Friday and O. Storz. Exploring the Grid’s Potential for Ubiquitous Computing. Pervasive Computing 3(2):74–75, Apr.–June, 2004.
D. Kane. Service-Oriented Architectures. In Loosely Coupled — The Missing Pieces of Web Services, pages 91–112, RDS Press, 2003.
H. Zhang, K. Keahey and B. Allcock. Providing Data Transfer with QoS as Agreement-Based Service. In Proc. of the IEEE International Conference on Services Computing (SCC 2004) (D. Feitelson and L. Rudolph, eds.), IEEE, 2004.
G. von Laszewski, E. Blau, M. Bletzinger, J. Gawor, P. Lane, S. Martin and M. Russell. Software, Component, and Service Deployment in Computational Grids. In Component Deployment: Proc. of the First International /IFIP/ACM Working Conference on Component Deployment. Volume 2370 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 244–256, Springer, 2002.
K. Czajkowski, D. Ferguson, I. Foster, J. Frey, S. Graham, T. Maguire, D. Snelling and S. Tuecke. From Open Grid Services Infrastructure to WS-Resource Framework: Refactoring & Evolution. Technical report, OASIS Web Services Resource Framework (WSRF) TC, March, 2004.
The Global Grid Forum, Grid Scheduling Architecture Research Group (GSA-RG). Web site, 2005. Online: https://forge.gridforum.org/projects/gsa-rg/.
V. Sander, W. Allcock, P. CongDuc, I. Monga, P. Padala, M. Tana, F. Travostino, J. Crowcroft, M. Gaynor, D. B. Hoang, P. Vicat-Blanc Primet and M. Welzl. Networking Issues for Grid Infrastructure. Grid Forum Document GFD.37, Global Grid Forum, 2004.
M. Antonioletti, M. Atkinson, R. Baxter, A. Borley, N.P. Chue Hong, et. al. OGSA-DAI Status Report and Future Directions. In Proc. of UK AHM 2004 (EPSRC, ed.), Sep., 2004.
U. Schwiegelshohn and R. Yahyapour. Attributes for Communication Between Grid Scheduling Instances. In Grid Resource Management-State of the Art and Future Trends, pages 41–52, (J. Nabrzyski, J. Schopf and J. Weglarz, eds.), Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003.
U. Schwiegelshohn and R. Yahyapour-Attributes for Communication Between Grid Scheduling Instances. Grid Forum Document GFD.6, Global Grid Forum, 2001.
R. Buyya, D. Abramson, J. Giddy and H. Stockinger. Economic Models for Resource Management and Scheduling in Grid Computing. Special Issue on Grid Computing Environments, The Journal of Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience (CCPE), 2002. Accepted for publication.
C. Ernemann and R. Yahyapour. Applying Economic Scheduling Methods to Grid Environments. In Grid Resource Management — State of the Art and Future Trends, (J. Nabrzyski, J. Schopf and J. Weglarz, eds.), pages 491–506, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003.
I. Foster and C. Kesselman. Globus: A metacomputing Infrastructure Toolkit. The International Journal of Supercomputer Applications and High Performance Computing 11(2): 115–128, 1997.
I. Foster, C. Kesselmann, J.M. Nick and S. Tuecke. The Pysiology of the Grid. In Grid Computing (F. Berman, and G.C. Fox and A.J.G. Hey, eds.), pages 217–249, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2003.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer Science+Business Media, Inc.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Schwiegelshohn, U., Yahyapour, R., Wieder, P. (2006). Resource Management for Future Generation Grids. In: Getov, V., Laforenza, D., Reinefeld, A. (eds) Future Generation Grids. Springer, Boston, MA . https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-29445-2_6
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-29445-2_6
Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA
Print ISBN: 978-0-387-27935-0
Online ISBN: 978-0-387-29445-2
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)