Sandy Ryza created YARN-972:
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             Summary: Allow requests and scheduling for fractional virtual cores
                 Key: YARN-972
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-972
             Project: Hadoop YARN
          Issue Type: Improvement
          Components: api, scheduler
    Affects Versions: 2.0.5-alpha
            Reporter: Sandy Ryza
            Assignee: Sandy Ryza


As this idea sparked a fair amount of discussion on YARN-2, I'd like to go 
deeper into the reasoning.

Currently the virtual core abstraction hides two orthogonal goals.  The first 
is that a cluster might have heterogeneous hardware and that the processing 
power of different makes of cores can vary wildly.  The second is that a 
different (combinations of) workloads can require different levels of 
granularity.  E.g. one admin might want every task on their cluster to use at 
least a core, while another might want applications to be able to request 
quarters of cores.  The former would configure a single vcore per core.  The 
latter would configure four vcores per core.

I don't think that the abstraction is a good way of handling the second goal.  
Having a virtual cores refer to different magnitudes of processing power on 
different clusters will make the difficult problem of deciding how many cores 
to request for a job even more confusing.

Can we not handle this with dynamic oversubscription?
Dynamic oversubscription, i.e. adjusting the number of cores offered by a 
machine based on measured CPU-consumption, should work as a complement to 
fine-granularity scheduling.  Dynamic oversubscription is never going to be 
perfect, as the amount of CPU a process consumes can vary widely over its 
lifetime.  A task that first loads a bunch of data over the network and then 
performs complex computations on it will suffer if additional CPU-heavy tasks 
are scheduled on the same node because its initial CPU-utilization was low.  To 
guard against this, we will need to be conservative with how we dynamically 
oversubscribe.  If a user wants to explicitly hint to the scheduler that their 
task will not use much CPU, the scheduler should be able to take this into 
account.

On YARN-2, there are concerns that including floating point arithmetic in the 
scheduler will slow it down.  I question this assumption, and it is perhaps 
worth debating, but I think we can sidestep the issue by multiplying 
CPU-quantities inside the scheduler by a decently sized number like 1000 and 
keep doing the computations on integers.

The relevant APIs are marked as evolving, so there's no need for the change to 
delay 2.1.0-beta.

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