Hi Michael,

I think it may not be the latter becauseI see this in the comments of the
function resourceOffers():

 * Note that resources may be concurrently offered to more than one
   * framework at a time (depending on the allocator being used). In
   * that case, the first framework to launch tasks using those
   * resources will be able to use them while the other frameworks
   * will have those resources rescinded (or if a framework has
   * already launched tasks with those resources then those tasks will
   * fail with a TASK_LOST status and a message saying as much).
   */

So Mesos can support both 1 and 2 which actually depends on which allocator
being used, right?


2015-06-06 19:06 GMT+08:00 Michael Hausenblas <[email protected]>
:

>
> > 1. Mesos master offers all the resources to all the frameworks
> simultaneously.
> > 2. Mesos master offers resources to one framework at a time, e.g., it
> offers r1, r2, r3 to f1, and f1 accepts r1, and then it offers r2 and r3 to
> f2, ...
>
> The latter, yes.
>
> For a quick overview,  I suggest you have a look at
> http://mesos.apache.org/documentation/latest/mesos-architecture/ which
> covers the resource offer cycle.
>
> If you want to dive deeper, you might want to read:
>
> 1. http://mesos.berkeley.edu/mesos_tech_report.pdf
> 2. https://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~alig/papers/drf.pdf
>
>
> Note that there's a feature in the works that would be closer to your 1.,
> see https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MESOS-1607
>
> Cheers,
>                 Michael
>
> --
> Michael Hausenblas
> Ireland, Europe
> http://mhausenblas.info/
>
> > On 6 Jun 2015, at 12:51, Qian Zhang <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am new to Mesos, and I'd like to know if there are a lot resources in
> the Mesos cluster, how will Mesos master offer these resources to the
> multiple frameworks? I guess there can be two ways:
> > 1. Mesos master offers all the resources to all the frameworks
> simultaneously.
> > 2. Mesos master offers resources to one framework at a time, e.g., it
> offers r1, r2, r3 to f1, and f1 accepts r1, and then it offers r2 and r3 to
> f2, ...
> >
> > If it is 1, then I'd like to know how Mesos master resolves the
> conflicts, e.g., multiple frameworks accept the same resource.
> > If it is 2, then I see it is actually a serial process since Mesos
> master handle the frameworks one by one, then what is advantage of Mesos
> against traditional monolithic resource scheduler?
> >
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Qian
>
>

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