From: ye <hua...@gm...> - 2010-04-29 08:13:00
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Hi Mayuri, GridSim is of course good to start from scratch to implement your own ecosystem. Alea is based on GridSim and provides a lot of instant available features, such as a centralized meta-scheduler(high-level scheduler), processing capability of multi-CPU request jobs, etc. MaGate is also established on GridSim but work in a different direction. MaGate is using a self-structure P2P approach as its Information System and every node has its own high-level scheduler therefore no centralized point exist in the system. Meanwhile, MaGate integrates a simplified community aware scheduling protocol focus on reactive & dynamic scheduling (the protocol is accepted by IEEE AINA 2010 and IEEE ICDCS 2010, I hope an available version can be accessed soon). However, the MaGate is an ongoing work. The current available version from the website is a little old. If everything is fine, a new version is supposed to be published in May during a workshop in UK. Cheers, Ye On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 8:47 AM, Mayuri Mehta <may...@gm...>wrote: > Hi friends, > I decided to use Gridsim for *evaluating the performance of Dynamic Load > Balancing Algorithm in Distributed Systems *though it seems tough to do the > same because i have to incorporate new dynamic strategy in gridsim. > Meanwhile i came to know about Alea and Magate simulators which i feel will > be better for my purpose. At present all simulators are new for me. > > If anybody is aware of all these simulators, then kindly guide me which one > will be best suitable for my purpose and easy to use. Help will be > appreciated. > > Thanks. > > Mayuri Mehta > Research Scholar > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Gridsim-developers mailing list > Gri...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gridsim-developers > |