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Design and Evaluation of Data Center Network Topologies
PhD Thesis Proposal Defence Title: "Design and Evaluation of Data Center Network Topologies" by Mr. Yang LIU ABSTRACT: Large-scale data centers form the core infrastructure support for the ever expanding cloud based services. Thus the performance and dependability characteristics of data centers will have significant impact on the scalability of these services. In particular, the data center network needs to be agile and reconfigurable in order to respond quickly to ever changing application demands and service requirements. Significant research work has been done on designing the data center network topologies in order to improve the performance of data centers. In this proposal, we first present a abstract survey of data center network designs and topologies that have published recently. We start with a discussion on various representative data center network topologies, and compare them with respect to several properties in order to highlight their advantages and disadvantages. A good understanding of the state-of-the-art in data center networks would enable the design of future architectures in order to improve performance and dependability of data centers. With the plethora of data center network (DCN) topologies that have been proposed in the literature, there is a sore need for a standardized method for evaluating and comparing various alternate DCN architectures. Considering these needs, we designed DCNSim, a general purpose DCN simulator that supports most well-known DCN topologies proposed in the literature. Our simulator can generate various metrics for the topologies, including static metrics like average path length, aggregated bottleneck throughput, routing failure rate; and dynamic metrics like packet loss rate, average buffer size and link utilization. The modular and flexible architecture of the simulator permits easy extension to support any future proposed topologies and compute new metrics. With the support of DCNSim, we present an evaluation of the fault-tolerance characteristics of several important data center network topologies. These enable us to present an objective comparison of the network topologies under faulty conditions. The concept of fault region is useful to describe associated failures. Optical data center networks (DCNs) are becoming increasingly popular for their technological advantages including flexibility and high bandwidth. However, the existing algorithm applied in literature cannot fully utilize such model and its flexibility. We focuses on addressing these two main questions which are of key importance to fully exploit the advantages of the optical DCNs. To this end, we present an algorithm for constructing the network. By integrating largest flow first and traffic aware shortest path routing together, our new topology construction algorithm significantly improves the throughput by $90\%$ over the existing one under the evaluated traffic patterns. On base of above work, we propose future research plan that helps to build a more solid thesis to fulfill the requirement of the degree. Date: Monday, 18 March 2013 Time: 4:00pm - 6:00pm Venue: Room 4480 lifts 25/26 Committee Members: Dr. Jogesh Muppala (Supervisor) Dr. Brahim Bensaou (Chairperson) Dr. Gary Chan Dr. Pan Hui **** ALL are Welcome ****