English

Machine Learning-Driven Predictive Resource Management in Complex Science Workflows

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2025-12-22 v2 Artificial Intelligence Machine Learning

Abstract

The collaborative efforts of large communities in science experiments, often comprising thousands of global members, reflect a monumental commitment to exploration and discovery. Recently, advanced and complex data processing has gained increasing importance in science experiments. Data processing workflows typically consist of multiple intricate steps, and the precise specification of resource requirements is crucial for each step to allocate optimal resources for effective processing. Estimating resource requirements in advance is challenging due to a wide range of analysis scenarios, varying skill levels among community members, and the continuously increasing spectrum of computing options. One practical approach to mitigate these challenges involves initially processing a subset of each step to measure precise resource utilization from actual processing profiles before completing the entire step. While this two-staged approach enables processing on optimal resources for most of the workflow, it has drawbacks such as initial inaccuracies leading to potential failures and suboptimal resource usage, along with overhead from waiting for initial processing completion, which is critical for fast-turnaround analyses. In this context, our study introduces a novel pipeline of machine learning models within a comprehensive workflow management system, the Production and Distributed Analysis (PanDA) system. These models employ advanced machine learning techniques to predict key resource requirements, overcoming challenges posed by limited upfront knowledge of characteristics at each step. Accurate forecasts of resource requirements enable informed and proactive decision-making in workflow management, enhancing the efficiency of handling diverse, complex workflows across heterogeneous resources.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2509.11512,
  title  = {Machine Learning-Driven Predictive Resource Management in Complex Science Workflows},
  author = {Tasnuva Chowdhury and Tadashi Maeno and Fatih Furkan Akman and Joseph Boudreau and Sankha Dutta and Shengyu Feng and Adolfy Hoisie and Kuan-Chieh Hsu and Raees Khan and Jaehyung Kim and Ozgur O. Kilic and Scott Klasky and Alexei Klimentov and Tatiana Korchuganova and Verena Ingrid Martinez Outschoorn and Paul Nilsson and David K. Park and Norbert Podhorszki and Yihui Ren and John Rembrandt Steele and Frédéric Suter and Sairam Sri Vatsavai and Torre Wenaus and Wei Yang and Yiming Yang and Shinjae Yoo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.11512},
  year   = {2025}
}