Universal Scalability Law: Difference between revisions
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Pushing utilization beyond a certain point will yield diminishing or even negative returns. This observation was formalized by Neil J. Guther as Universal Scalability Law (USL). | Pushing utilization beyond a certain point will yield diminishing or even negative returns. This observation was formalized by Neil J. Guther as Universal Scalability Law (USL). | ||
USL introduces the cost of communication - coherency, or the cost of keeping data in sync - as a variable in the equation. |
Revision as of 20:12, 20 July 2018
External
- Neil J. Gunther, “A Simple Capacity Model of Massively Parallel Transaction Systems,” proceedings of CMG National Conference (1993) http://www.perfdynamics.com/Papers/njgCMG93.pdf
- Baron Schwartz, "Practical Scalability Analysis with the Universal Scalability Law" https://www.vividcortex.com/resources/universal-scalability-law/
Internal
Overview
Pushing utilization beyond a certain point will yield diminishing or even negative returns. This observation was formalized by Neil J. Guther as Universal Scalability Law (USL).
USL introduces the cost of communication - coherency, or the cost of keeping data in sync - as a variable in the equation.