The CO2 emission of data centres worldwide is already equivalent to about the total airlines' CO2 emissions, and accounts for almost 2% of the world production. As energy consumption increases and environmental concerns grow, efficiency of IT systems and data centres becomes a priority for the industry. High Performance Computing is considered one of the major issues to be addressed in this context. The GAMES project aims at developing a set of innovative methodologies, metrics, Open Source ICT services and tools for the active management of energy efficiency of IT Service Centres. In this paper we are going to present how in particular complex HPC environments can be monitored and managed in an energy-efficient way whilst keeping the additional payload for the entire system as little as possible.
%0 Generic
%1 kipp2011approach
%A Kipp, A.
%A Liu, Jia
%A Jiang, Tao
%A Khabi, D.
%A Kovalenko, Y.
%A Schubert, L.
%A vor dem Berge, M.
%A Christmann, W.
%B Intelligent Computer Communication and Processing (ICCP), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
%C Cluj-Napoca
%D 2011
%I IEEE
%K energy hlrs hpc myown power
%P 493 - 499
%T Approach towards an energy-aware and energy-efficient high performance computing environment
%X The CO2 emission of data centres worldwide is already equivalent to about the total airlines' CO2 emissions, and accounts for almost 2% of the world production. As energy consumption increases and environmental concerns grow, efficiency of IT systems and data centres becomes a priority for the industry. High Performance Computing is considered one of the major issues to be addressed in this context. The GAMES project aims at developing a set of innovative methodologies, metrics, Open Source ICT services and tools for the active management of energy efficiency of IT Service Centres. In this paper we are going to present how in particular complex HPC environments can be monitored and managed in an energy-efficient way whilst keeping the additional payload for the entire system as little as possible.
@conference{kipp2011approach,
abstract = {The CO2 emission of data centres worldwide is already equivalent to about the total airlines' CO2 emissions, and accounts for almost 2% of the world production. As energy consumption increases and environmental concerns grow, efficiency of IT systems and data centres becomes a priority for the industry. High Performance Computing is considered one of the major issues to be addressed in this context. The GAMES project aims at developing a set of innovative methodologies, metrics, Open Source ICT services and tools for the active management of energy efficiency of IT Service Centres. In this paper we are going to present how in particular complex HPC environments can be monitored and managed in an energy-efficient way whilst keeping the additional payload for the entire system as little as possible.},
added-at = {2015-11-30T22:54:32.000+0100},
address = {Cluj-Napoca},
author = {Kipp, A. and Liu, Jia and Jiang, Tao and Khabi, D. and Kovalenko, Y. and Schubert, L. and vor dem Berge, M. and Christmann, W.},
biburl = {https://puma.ub.uni-stuttgart.de/bibtex/24bd6a3bea2c3c904102a3caf065089f5/dmitrykhabi},
booktitle = {Intelligent Computer Communication and Processing (ICCP), 2011 IEEE International Conference on },
day = 25,
interhash = {e46abe47457304072a4d2b5598a96c76},
intrahash = {4bd6a3bea2c3c904102a3caf065089f5},
keywords = {energy hlrs hpc myown power},
month = {8},
pages = {493 - 499},
publisher = {IEEE},
timestamp = {2015-11-30T21:54:32.000+0100},
title = {Approach towards an energy-aware and energy-efficient high performance computing environment},
year = 2011
}