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  1. Outputs

Tight Bounds for Selfish and Greedy Load Balancing

Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2006
abstract:
We study the load balancing problem in the context of a set of clients each wishing to run a job on a server selected among a subset of permissible servers for the particular client. We consider two different scenarios. In selfish load balancing, each client is selfish in the sense that it selects to run its job to the server among its permissible servers having the smallest latency given the assignments of the jobs of other clients to servers. In online load balancing, clients appear online and, when a client appears, it has to make an irrevocable decision and assign its job to one of its permissible servers. Here, we assume that the clients aim to optimize some global criterion but in an online fashion. A natural local optimization criterion that can be used by each client when making its decision is to assign its job to that server that gives the minimum increase of the global objective. This gives rise to greedy online solutions. The aim of this paper is to determine how much the quality of load balancing is affected by selfishness and greediness. We characterize almost completely the impact of selfishness and greediness in load balancing by presenting new and improved, tight or almost tight bounds on the price of anarchy and price of stability of selfish load balancing as well as on the competitiveness of the greedy algorithm for online load balancing when the objective is to minimize the total latency of all clients on servers with linear latency functions.
Iris type:
4.1 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
AlgorithmsClient server computer systemsFunction evaluationOnline systemsOptimizationServers
List of contributors:
I., Caragiannis; M., Flammini; C., Kaklamanis; P., Kanellopoulos; Moscardelli, Luca
Authors of the University:
MOSCARDELLI Luca
Handle:
https://ricerca.unich.it/handle/11564/131065
Book title:
Automata, Languages and Programming, 33rd International Colloquium, ICALP 2006, Venice, Italy, July 10-14, 2006, Proceedings, Part I
Published in:
LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
Journal
LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
Series
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