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What is Meta-Scheduler

Handbook of Research on Grid Technologies and Utility Computing: Concepts for Managing Large-Scale Applications
A meta-scheduler is a software layer that abstracts the details of different grid middlewares. In this way a client can support multiple submission systems while only having to deal with one protocol (that used by the abstraction layer). An example of a meta-scheduler is GridWay (www.gridway.org).
Published in Chapter:
Grid Enabled Surrogate Modeling
Dirk Gorissen (Gent University–IBBT, Belgium), Tom Dhaene (Gent University–IBBT, Belgium), Piet Demeester (Gent University–IBBT, Belgium), and Jan Broeckhove (Gent University–IBBT, Belgium)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-184-1.ch025
Abstract
The simulation and optimization of complex systems is a very time consuming and computationally intensive task. Therefore, global surrogate modeling methods are often used for the efficient exploration of the design space, as they reduce the number of simulations needed. However, constructing such surrogate models (or metamodels) is often done in a straightforward, sequential fashion. In contrast, this chapter presents a framework that can leverage the use of compute clusters and grids in order to decrease the model generation time by efficiently running simulations in parallel. The authors describe the integration between surrogate modeling and grid computing on three levels: resource level, scheduling level and service level. This approach is illustrated with a simple example from aerodynamics.
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A Fault Tolerant Decentralized Scheduling in Large Scale Distributed Systems
A scheduler that allows requesting resources of more than one machine for a single job. It may perform load balancing of workloads across multiple systems. Each system would then have its own local scheduler to determine how its job queue is processed. Requires advance reservation capability of local schedulers.
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