Decoupling Computation and Data Scheduling in Distributed Data-Intensive Applications
HPDC '02 Proceedings of the 11th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing
A Decentralized, Adaptive Replica Location Mechanism
HPDC '02 Proceedings of the 11th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing
A Community Authorization Service for Group Collaboration
POLICY '02 Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks (POLICY'02)
PlanetLab: an overlay testbed for broad-coverage services
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
Usage Policy-Based CPU Sharing in Virtual Organizations
GRID '04 Proceedings of the 5th IEEE/ACM International Workshop on Grid Computing
DiPerF: An Automated DIstributed PERformance Testing Framework
GRID '04 Proceedings of the 5th IEEE/ACM International Workshop on Grid Computing
The Grid2003 Production Grid: Principles and Practice
HPDC '04 Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Service oriented computing
Cremona: an architecture and library for creation and monitoring of WS-agreents
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Service oriented computing
GangSim: a simulator for grid scheduling studies
CCGRID '05 Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE International Symposium on Cluster Computing and the Grid (CCGrid'05) - Volume 2 - Volume 02
Operating system support for planetary-scale network services
NSDI'04 Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation - Volume 1
HPDC '05 Proceedings of the High Performance Distributed Computing, 2005. HPDC-14. Proceedings. 14th IEEE International Symposium
End-to-end quality of service for high-end applications
Computer Communications
Analysis and modeling of job arrivals in a production grid
ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review
Designing a resource broker for heterogeneous grids
Software—Practice & Experience
Long range dependent job arrival process and its implications in grid environments
Proceedings of the first international conference on Networks for grid applications
A Workflow Engine-Driven SOA-Based Cooperative Computing Paradigm in Grid Environments
International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications
A novel multi-objective optimization scheme for grid resource allocation
Proceedings of the 6th international workshop on Middleware for grid computing
Model-based simulation and performance evaluation of grid scheduling strategies
Future Generation Computer Systems
A reputation-driven scheduler for autonomic and sustainable resource sharing in Grid computing
Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing
Modeling job arrivals in a data-intensive grid
JSSPP'06 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Job scheduling strategies for parallel processing
Problems for resource brokering in large and dynamic grid environments
Euro-Par'06 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Parallel Processing
Decentralized scalable fairshare scheduling
Future Generation Computer Systems
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Managing usage service level agreements (USLAs) within environments that integrate participants and resources spanning multiple physical institutions is a challenging problem. Maintaining a single unified USLA management decision point over hundreds to thousands of jobs and sites can become a bottleneck in terms of reliability as well as performance. DIGRUBER, an extension to our GRUBER brokering framework, was developed as a distributed grid USLAbased resource broker that allows multiple decision points to coexist and cooperate in real-time. DIGRUBER addresses issues regarding how USLAs can be stored, retrieved, and disseminated efficiently in a large distributed environment. The key question this paper addresses is the scalability and performance of DI-GRUBER in large Grid environments. We conclude that as little as three to five decision points can be sufficient in an environment with 300 sites and 60 VOs, an environment ten times larger than today's Open Science Grid.