Analysis of large-scale distributed information systems
Joseph L. Hellerstein, T.S. Jayram, et al.
MASCOTS 2000
Quantitative performance diagnosis (QPD) provides explanations that quantify the impact of problem causes. An example of such an explanation is Increased web server traffic accounts for 90% of the increase in LAN utilization, which in turn accounts for 20% of the increase in web response times. This paper describes GAP, a general approach to quantitative performance diagnosis. GAP has two parts: (1) an algorithm for computing quantitative performance diagnoses; and (2) a framework for constructing diagnostic techniques that provides the basis for quantifications produced by the algorithm. The GAP algorithm makes use of a measurement navigation graph, a directed acyclic graph whose nodes are measurement variables and whose arcs have weights that quantify the effect of child variables (e.g., LAN utilization) on parent variables (e.g., response time). The framework for developing diagnostic techniques consists of (a) the choice of statistic (e.g., mean, variance) to aggregate problem values, and (b) the estimator of the statistic.
Joseph L. Hellerstein, T.S. Jayram, et al.
MASCOTS 2000
Joseph L. Hellerstein
CMG 1992
Joseph L. Hellerstein
SIGMETRICS 1996
Yixin Diao, Chai Wah Wu, et al.
ACC 2005