Distributed Resource Management Across Process Boundaries

Proceedings of the 2017 Symposium on Cloud Computing (SoCC) |

Published by ACM

Publication

Multi-tenant distributed systems composed of small services, such
as Service-oriented Architectures (SOAs) and Micro-services, raise
new challenges in attaining high performance and efficient resource
utilization. In these systems, a request execution spans tens to thousands
of processes, and the execution paths and resource demands on
different services are generally not known when a request first enters
the system. In this paper, we highlight the fundamental challenges of
regulating load and scheduling in SOAs while meeting end-to-end
performance objectives on metrics of concern to both tenants and
operators. We design Wisp, a framework for building SOAs that
transparently adapts rate limiters and request schedulers system-wide
according to operator policies to satisfy end-to-end goals while
responding to changing system conditions. In evaluations against production
as well as synthetic workloads, Wisp successfully enforces
a range of end-to-end performance objectives, such as reducing average
latencies, meeting deadlines, providing fairness and isolation,
and avoiding system overload.