9781107027503-1107027500-Performance Modeling and Design of Computer Systems: Queueing Theory in Action

Performance Modeling and Design of Computer Systems: Queueing Theory in Action

ISBN-13: 9781107027503
ISBN-10: 1107027500
Edition: New
Author: Mor Harchol-Balter
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardcover 576 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781107027503
ISBN-10: 1107027500
Edition: New
Author: Mor Harchol-Balter
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardcover 576 pages

Summary

Performance Modeling and Design of Computer Systems: Queueing Theory in Action (ISBN-13: 9781107027503 and ISBN-10: 1107027500), written by authors Mor Harchol-Balter, was published by Cambridge University Press in 2013. With an overall rating of 4.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Networking & Cloud Computing books. You can easily purchase or rent Performance Modeling and Design of Computer Systems: Queueing Theory in Action (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Networking & Cloud Computing books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $17.97.

Description

Computer systems design is full of conundrums: •Given a choice between a single machine with speed s, or n machines each with speed s/n, which should we choose?
•If both the arrival rate and service rate double, will the mean response time stay the same?
•Should systems really aim to balance load, or is this a convenient myth? •If a scheduling policy favors one set of jobs, does it necessarily hurt some other jobs, or are these "conservation laws" being misinterpreted?
•Do greedy, shortest-delay, routing strategies make sense in a server farm, or is what's good for the individual disastrous for the system as a whole?
•How do high job size variability and heavy-tailed workloads affect the choice of a scheduling policy?
•How should one trade off energy and delay in designing a computer system?
•If 12 servers are needed to meet delay guarantees when the arrival rate is 9 jobs/sec, will we need 12,000 servers when the arrival rate is 9,000 jobs/sec?
Tackling the questions that systems designers care about, this book brings queueing theory decisively back to computer science. The book is written with computer scientists and engineers in mind and is full of examples from computer systems, as well as manufacturing and operations research. Fun and readable, the book is highly approachable, even for undergraduates, while still being thoroughly rigorous and also covering a much wider span of topics than many queueing books. Readers benefit from a lively mix of motivation and intuition, with illustrations, examples, and more than 300 exercises - all while acquiring the skills needed to model, analyze, and design large-scale systems with good performance and low cost. The exercises are an important feature, teaching research-level counterintuitive lessons in the design of computer systems. The goal is to train readers not only to customize existing analyses but also to invent their own.

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