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OTM
2007
Springer

HARC: The Highly-Available Resource Co-allocator

13 years 10 months ago
HARC: The Highly-Available Resource Co-allocator
HARC—the Highly-Available Resource Co-allocator—is an open-source system for reserving multiple resources in a coordinated fashion. HARC can handle different types of resource, and has been used to reserve time on supercomputers across a US-wide testbed, together with dedicated lightpaths connecting the machines. At HARC’s core are a distributed set of processes called Acceptors, which provide a co-allocation service. HARC functions normally provided a majority of the Acceptors are working; this replication gives HARC its high availability. The Paxos Commit protocol ensures that consistency across all Acceptors is maintained. This paper gives an overview of HARC, and explains both how it works and how it is used. We show that HARC’s design makes it easy for the community to contribute new components for co-allocating different types of resource, while the stability of the overall system is maintained.
Jon MacLaren
Added 08 Jun 2010
Updated 08 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where OTM
Authors Jon MacLaren
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