Identifying FEDERICA resources Sample Clauses

Identifying FEDERICA resources. Simulation framework for FEDERICA infrastructure provides three groups of resources: • Computing resources (virtual nodes) – virtual machines hosted by virtualisation software characterized by the number of CPUs, network interfaces and amount of memory and disk space. The number of nodes running on a single server is limited by its hardware resources. • Network resources (routers, software routers, switches) – routers and switches are instances of virtual routers in Juniper hardware. Software router is a dedicated virtual node containing network software with support for custom implementations of routing protocols. • Network links – a way of communication between above resources with bandwidth limited to 1Gb/s (according to current FEDERICA infrastructure). A deeper look into resource types shows no particular difference between a virtual node and a software router, or between a router and a switch. In all cases, the same hardware is used to host them (i.e. a virtualisation server for the virtual node and software router, and Juniper hardware for the router and switch). This leads to the conclusion that, without loss of generality, we can divide all the computing and network resources into two classes: nodes and routers. Furthermore, it was assumed that every virtualisation server and every Juniper router provides a constant number of maximum virtual instances they can host in a single point of time. This assumption implies identical parameters of virtual instances with physical resources equally divided among them. Although the simulation allows the framework to support reservations for network bandwidth, this feature is not available in the FEDERICA infrastructure, due to the project’s architecture details. Each physical network interface is shared by many virtual machines running in virtualisation software which means that the system lacks the mechanism to enforce bandwidth limits. This leads to a problem of measuring network performance in simulation environment. (Note that the performance issues are not taken into account in the case of the real FEDERICA infrastructure either.) The only metric for expressing link quality available in a simulation framework is the number of reservations made. This leads to the conclusion that ways of expressing network performance must be re-visited and eventually incorporated into the simulation environment.
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