Falavinha Jr., José Nelson [UNESP]Manacero Jr., Aleardo [UNESP]Livny, MironBradley, Daniel2014-05-272014-05-272009-12-01Proceedings of the International Conference on Parallel Processing Workshops, p. 298-305.1530-2016http://hdl.handle.net/11449/71295In large distributed systems, where shared resources are owned by distinct entities, there is a need to reflect resource ownership in resource allocation. An appropriate resource management system should guarantee that resource's owners have access to a share of resources proportional to the share they provide. In order to achieve that some policies can be used for revoking access to resources currently used by other users. In this paper, a scheduling policy based in the concept of distributed ownership is introduced called Owner Share Enforcement Policy (OSEP). OSEP goal is to guarantee that owner do not have their jobs postponed for longer periods of time. We evaluate the results achieved with the application of this policy using metrics that describe policy violation, loss of capacity, policy cost and user satisfaction in environments with and without job checkpointing. We also evaluate and compare the OSEP policy with the Fair-Share policy, and from these results it is possible to capture the trade-offs from different ways to achieve fairness based on the user satisfaction. © 2009 IEEE.298-305engDistribute systemsFair schedulingOwnership conceptScheduling algorithmsCheck pointingDistributed ownershipDistributed systemsLoss-of-capacityResource management systemsResource ownershipScheduling policiesShared resourcesUser satisfactionComputer resource managementResource allocationThe Owner Share scheduler for a distributed systemTrabalho apresentado em evento10.1109/ICPPW.2009.19WOS:000289915300042Acesso aberto2-s2.0-77949516424