We introduce Ego4D, a massive-scale egocentric video dataset and benchmark suite. It offers 3,670 hours of dailylife activity video spanning hundreds of scenarios (household, outdoor, workplace, leisure, etc.) captured by 931 unique camera wearers from 74 worldwide locations and 9 different countries. The approach to collection is designed to uphold rigorous privacy and ethics standards, with consenting participants and robust de-identification procedures where relevant. Ego4D dramatically expands the volume of diverse egocentric video footage publicly available to the research community. Portions of the video are accompanied by audio, 3D meshes of the environment, eye gaze, stereo, and/or synchronized videos from multiple egocentric cameras at the same event. Furthermore, we present a host of new benchmark challenges centered around understanding the first-person visual experience in the past (querying an episodic memory), present (analyzing hand-object manipulation, audio-visual conversation, and social interactions), and future (forecasting activities). By publicly sharing this massive annotated dataset and benchmark suite, we aim to push the frontier of first-person perception.
Virtual machine (VM) live migration is a critical feature for managing virtualized environments, enabling dynamic load balancing, consolidation for power management, preparation for planned maintenance, and other management features. However, not all virtual machine live migration is created equal. Variants include memory migration, which relies on shared backend storage between the source and destination of the migration, and storage migration, which migrates storage state as well as memory state. We have developed an automated testing framework that measures important performance characteristics of live migration, including total migration time, the time a VM is unresponsive during migration, and the amount of data transferred over the network during migration. We apply this testing framework and present the results of studying live migration, both memory migration and storage migration, in various virtualization systems including KVM, XenServer, VMware, and Hyper-V. The results provide important data to guide the migration decisions of both system administrators and autonomic cloud management systems.
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