Thomas M. Brey
IBM
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas M. Brey.
international symposium on computer architecture | 2013
Canturk Isci; Suzanne K. McIntosh; Jeffrey O. Kephart; Rajarshi Das; James E. Hanson; Scott A. Piper; Robert R. Wolford; Thomas M. Brey; Robert F. Kantner; Allen Ng; James Norris; Abdoulaye Traore; Michael J. Frissora
One of the main driving forces of the growing adoption of virtualization is its dramatic simplification of the provisioning and dynamic management of IT resources. By decoupling running entities from the underlying physical resources, and by providing easy-to-use controls to allocate, deallocate and migrate virtual machines (VMs) across physical boundaries, virtualization opens up new opportunities for improving overall system resource use and power efficiency. While a range of techniques for dynamic, distributed resource management of virtualized systems have been proposed and have seen their widespread adoption in enterprise systems, similar techniques for dynamic power management have seen limited acceptance. The main barrier to dynamic, power-aware virtualization management stems not from the limitations of virtualization, but rather from the underlying physical systems; and in particular, the high latency and energy cost of power state change actions suited for virtualization power management. In this work, we first explore the feasibility of low-latency power states for enterprise server systems and demonstrate, with real prototypes, their quantitative energy-performance trade offs compared to traditional server power states. Then, we demonstrate an end-to-end power-aware virtualization management solution leveraging these states, and evaluate the dramatically-favorable power-performance characteristics achievable with such systems. We present, via both real system implementations and scale-out simulations, that virtualization power management with low-latency server power states can achieve comparable overheads as base distributed resource management in virtualized systems, and thus can benefit from the same level of adoption, while delivering close to energy-proportional power efficiency.
Archive | 2007
Thomas M. Brey; William J. Piazza
Archive | 1991
Thomas M. Brey; Matthew Anthony Krygowski; Bruce Lloyd Mcgilvray; Trinh Huy Nguyen; William Wu Shen; Arthur James Sutton
Archive | 2005
Aaron E. Merkin; Thomas M. Brey; Joseph E. Bolan
Archive | 2008
Brad L. Brech; Thomas M. Brey
Archive | 2008
Thomas M. Brey; Richard E. Harper; Thomas D. Pahel; William J. Piazza
Archive | 2006
Thomas M. Brey; Wesley M. Felter; Charles R. Lefurgy; Karthick Rajamani; Juan C. Rubio; Malcolm Scott Ware
Archive | 2004
Thomas M. Brey; Giles R. Frazier; Gregory F. Pfister; William J. Rooney
Archive | 2007
Thomas M. Brey; Raymond M. Clemo; Beth Frayne Loebach; Gregory J. McKnight
Archive | 2005
Joesph E. Bolan; Thomas M. Brey; Dhruv M. Desai; Nickolas J. Gruendler; James E. Hughes; Edward Joseph Klodnicki; Sumeet Kochar; Gary R. Shippy