Power gating with multiple sleep modes
Kanak Agarwal, Harmander Deogun, et al.
ISQED 2006
Multi-tenant datacenters are successful because tenants can seamlessly port their applications and services to the cloud. Virtual Machine (VM) technology plays an integral role in this success by enabling a diverse set of software to be run on a unified underlying framework. This flexibility, however, comes at the cost of dealing with out-dated, inefficient, or misconfigured TCP stacks implemented in the VMs. This paper investigates if administrators can take control of a VM's TCP congestion control algorithm without making changes to the VM or network hardware. We propose AC↯DC TCP, a scheme that exerts fine-grained control over arbitrary tenant TCP stacks by enforcing per-flow congestion control in the virtual switch (vSwitch). Our scheme is light-weight, flexible, scalable and can police non-conforming flows. In our evaluation the computational overhead of AC↯DC TCP is less than one percentage point and we show implementing an administrator-defined congestion control algorithm in the vSwitch (i.e., DCTCP) closely tracks its native performance, regardless of the VM's TCP stack.
Kanak Agarwal, Harmander Deogun, et al.
ISQED 2006
Frank Liu, Kanak Agarwal
ICMTS 2009
Keqiang He, Eric Rozner, et al.
SIGCOMM 2015
Jeff Rasley, Brent Stephens, et al.
ONS 2014