Delay, memory, and messaging tradeoffs in distributed service systems (1709.04102v1)
Abstract: We consider the following distributed service model: jobs with unit mean, exponentially distributed, and independent processing times arrive as a Poisson process of rate $\lambda n$, with $0<\lambda<1$, and are immediately dispatched by a centralized dispatcher to one of $n$ First-In-First-Out queues associated with $n$ identical servers. The dispatcher is endowed with a finite memory, and with the ability to exchange messages with the servers. We propose and study a resource-constrained "pull-based" dispatching policy that involves two parameters: (i) the number of memory bits available at the dispatcher, and (ii) the average rate at which servers communicate with the dispatcher. We establish (using a fluid limit approach) that the asymptotic, as $n\to\infty$, expected queueing delay is zero when either (i) the number of memory bits grows logarithmically with $n$ and the message rate grows superlinearly with $n$, or (ii) the number of memory bits grows superlogarithmically with $n$ and the message rate is at least $\lambda n$. Furthermore, when the number of memory bits grows only logarithmically with $n$ and the message rate is proportional to $n$, we obtain a closed-form expression for the (now positive) asymptotic delay. Finally, we demonstrate an interesting phase transition in the resource-constrained regime where the asymptotic delay is non-zero. In particular, we show that for any given $\alpha>0$ (no matter how small), if our policy only uses a linear message rate $\alpha n$, the resulting asymptotic delay is upper bounded, uniformly over all $\lambda<1$; this is in sharp contrast to the delay obtained when no messages are used ($\alpha = 0$), which grows as $1/(1-\lambda)$ when $\lambda\uparrow 1$, or when the popular power-of-$d$-choices is used, in which the delay grows as $\log(1/(1-\lambda))$.
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