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Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?

By analysing large data-sets on jobs processed in major computing centres, we study how operations management principles apply to these modern day processing plants. We show that Little’s Law on long-term performance averages holds to computing centres, i.e. work-in-progress equals throughput rate m...

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Autores principales: Abaunza, Felipe, Chavez-Demoulin, Valérie, Hameri, Ari-Pekka, Niemi, Tapio
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09537287.2014.893458
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1973363
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author Abaunza, Felipe
Chavez-Demoulin, Valérie
Hameri, Ari-Pekka
Niemi, Tapio
author_facet Abaunza, Felipe
Chavez-Demoulin, Valérie
Hameri, Ari-Pekka
Niemi, Tapio
author_sort Abaunza, Felipe
collection CERN
description By analysing large data-sets on jobs processed in major computing centres, we study how operations management principles apply to these modern day processing plants. We show that Little’s Law on long-term performance averages holds to computing centres, i.e. work-in-progress equals throughput rate multiplied by process lead time. Contrary to traditional manufacturing principles, the law of variation does not hold to computing centres, as the more variation in job lead times the better the throughput and utilisation of the system. We also show that as the utilisation of the system increases lead times and work-in-progress increase, which complies with traditional manufacturing. In comparison with current computing centre operations these results imply that better allocation of jobs could increase throughput and utilisation, while less computing resources are needed, thus increasing the overall efficiency of the centre. From a theoretical point of view, in a system with close to zero set-up times, as in the case of computing centres, the law of variation does not hold. We observe that the more variation in job lead times and resource usage, the higher the throughput of the system.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2014
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spelling cern-19733632019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1080/09537287.2014.893458http://cds.cern.ch/record/1973363engAbaunza, FelipeChavez-Demoulin, ValérieHameri, Ari-PekkaNiemi, TapioDo flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?XXBy analysing large data-sets on jobs processed in major computing centres, we study how operations management principles apply to these modern day processing plants. We show that Little’s Law on long-term performance averages holds to computing centres, i.e. work-in-progress equals throughput rate multiplied by process lead time. Contrary to traditional manufacturing principles, the law of variation does not hold to computing centres, as the more variation in job lead times the better the throughput and utilisation of the system. We also show that as the utilisation of the system increases lead times and work-in-progress increase, which complies with traditional manufacturing. In comparison with current computing centre operations these results imply that better allocation of jobs could increase throughput and utilisation, while less computing resources are needed, thus increasing the overall efficiency of the centre. From a theoretical point of view, in a system with close to zero set-up times, as in the case of computing centres, the law of variation does not hold. We observe that the more variation in job lead times and resource usage, the higher the throughput of the system.oai:cds.cern.ch:19733632014
spellingShingle XX
Abaunza, Felipe
Chavez-Demoulin, Valérie
Hameri, Ari-Pekka
Niemi, Tapio
Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title_full Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title_fullStr Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title_full_unstemmed Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title_short Do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
title_sort do flow principles of operations management apply to computing centres?
topic XX
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09537287.2014.893458
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1973363
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