Resumption of virtual machines after adaptive deduplication of virtual machine images in live migration

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Abstract

In cloud computing, load balancing, energy utilization are the critical problems solved by virtual machine (VM) migration. Live migration is the live movement of VMs from an overloaded/underloaded physical machine to a suitable one. During this process, transferring large disk image files take more time, hence more migration and down time. In the proposed adaptive deduplication, based on the image file size, the file undergoes both fixed, variable length deduplication processes. The significance of this paper is resumption of VMs with reunited deduplicated disk image files. The performance measured by calculating the percentage reduction of VM image size after deduplication, the time taken to migrate the deduplicated file and the time taken for each VM to resume after the migration. The results show that 83%, 89.76% reduction overall image size and migration time respectively. For a deduplication ratio of 92%, it takes an overall time of 3.52 minutes, 7% reduction in resumption time, compared with the time taken for the total QCOW2 files with original size. For VMDK files the resumption time reduced by a maximum 17% (7.63 mins) compared with that of for original files.

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APA

Naga Malleswari, T. Y. J., Senthil Kumar, T., & Jothi Kumar, C. (2021). Resumption of virtual machines after adaptive deduplication of virtual machine images in live migration. International Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 11(1), 654–663. https://doi.org/10.11591/ijece.v11i1.pp654-663

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