With the increasingly ubiquitous nature of Social networks and Cloud computing, users are starting to explore new ways to interact with, and exploit these developing paradigms. Social networks are used to reflect real world relationships that allow users to share information and form connections between one another, essentially creating dynamic Virtual Organizations. We propose leveraging the pre-established trust formed through friend relationships within a Social network to form a dynamic "Social Cloud", enabling friends to share resources within the context of a Social network. We believe that combining trust relationships with suitable incentive mechanisms (through financial payments or bartering) could provide much more sustainable resource sharing mechanisms. This paper outlines our vision of, and experiences with, creating a Social Storage Cloud, looking specifically at possible market mechanisms that could be used to create a dynamic Cloud infrastructure in a Social network environment.
Social network platforms have rapidly changed the way that people communicate and interact. They have enabled the establishment of, and participation in, digital communities as well as the representation, documentation and exploration of social relationships. We believe that as 'apps' become more sophisticated, it will become easier for users to share their own services, resources and data via social networks. To substantiate this, we present a social compute cloud where the provisioning of cloud infrastructure occurs through "friend" relationships. In a social compute cloud, resource owners offer virtualized containers on their personal computer(s) or smart device(s) to their social network. However, as users may have complex preference structures concerning with whom they do or do not wish to share their resources, we investigate, via simulation, how resources can be effectively allocated within a social community offering resources on a best effort basis. In the assessment of social resource allocation, we consider welfare, allocation fairness, and algorithmic runtime. The key findings of this work illustrate how social networks can be leveraged in the construction of cloud computing infrastructures and how resources can be allocated in the presence of user sharing preferences.
Abstract. Utility computing enables the use of computational resources and services by consumers with service obligations and expectations defined in Service Level Agreements (SLAs). Parallel applications and workflows can be executed across multiple sites to benefit from access to a wide range of resources and to respond to dynamic runtime requirements. A utility computing provider has the difficult role of ensuring that all current SLAs are provisioned, while concurrently forming new SLAs and providing multiple services to numerous consumers. Scheduling to satisfy SLAs can result in a low return from a provider's resources due to trading off Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees against utilisation. One technique is to employ advanced reservations so that a SLA aware scheduler can properly manage and schedule its resources. To improve utilisation we exploit the principle that some consumers will be more flexible than others in relation to the starting or completion time, and that we can juggle the execution schedule right up until each execution starts. In this paper we present a QoS scheduler that uses SLAs to efficiently schedule advanced reservations for computation services based on their flexibility. We present our SLA and scheduling algorithms, and show experimentally that it is possible to use flexible advanced reservations to meet specified QoS while improving resource utilisation.
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