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Journal article

Free-scaling your data center

From

Telefonica Research, Plaza de Ernest Lluch i Martín, 5, floor 15, 08019 Barcelona, Spain1

Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Department of Telecommunications and Media Informatics, 2 Magyar tudósok körútja, Budapest, H-1117, Hungary2

Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Telematics, O.S. Bragstads plass 2a, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway3

Hungarian Academy of Science (MTA) Information System Research Group, Széchenyi István tér 9., 1051 Budapest, Hungary4

MTA-BME Future Internet Research Group, Széchenyi István tér 9., 1051 Budapest, Hungary5

Inter-University Centre for Telecommunications and Informatics, Kassai út 26., 4028 Debrecen, Hungary6

The increasing popularity of both small and large private clouds and expanding public clouds poses new requirements to data center (DC) architectures. First, DC architectures should be incrementally scalable allowing the creation of DCs of arbitrary size with consistent performance characteristics. Second, initial DC deployments should be incrementally expandable supporting small-scale upgrades without decreasing operation efficiency.

A DC architecture possessing both properties satisfies the requirement of free-scaling.Recent work in DC design focuses on traditional performance and scalability characteristics, therefore resulting in symmetric topologies whose upgradability is coarse-grained at best. In our earlier work we proposed Scafida, an asymmetric, scale-free network inspired DC topology which scales incrementally and has favorable structural characteristics.

In this paper, we build on Scafida and propose a full-fledged DC architecture achieving free-scaling called FScafida. Our main contribution is threefold. First, we propose an organic expansion algorithm for FScafida; this combined with Scafida’s flexible original design results in a freely scalable architecture.

Second, we introduce the Effective Source Routing mechanism that provides near-shortest paths, multi-path and multicast capability, and low signaling overhead by exploiting the benefits of the FScafida topology. Third, we show based on extensive simulations and a prototype implementation that FScafida is capable of handling the traffic patterns characteristic of both enterprise and cloud data centers, tolerates network equipment failures to a high degree, and allows for high bisection bandwidth.

Language: English
Year: 2013
Pages: 1758-1773
ISSN: 18727069 and 13891286
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.comnet.2013.03.005

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