Large-scale computing frameworks, either tenanted on the cloud or deployed in the high-end local cluster, have become an indispensable software infrastructure to support numerous enterprise and scientific applications. Tasks executed on these frameworks are generally classified into data-intensive and compute-intensive ones. However, most existing frameworks, led by MapReduce, are mainly suitable for data-intensive tasks. Their task schedulers assume that the proportion of data I/O reflects the task progress and state. Unfortunately, this assumption does not apply to most compute-intensive tasks. Due to biased estimation of task progress, traditional frameworks cannot timely cut off outliers and therefore largely prolong execution time when performing compute-intensive tasks. We propose a new framework designed for compute-intensive tasks. By using instrumentation and automatic instrument point selector, our framework estimates the compute-intensive task progress without resorting to data I/O. We employ a clustering method to identify outliers at runtime and perform speculative execution/aborting, speeding up task execution by up to 25%. Moreover, our improvement to bare instrumentation limits overhead within 0.1%, and the aborting-based execution only introduces 10% more average CPU usage. Low overhead and resource consumption make our framework practically usable in the production environment.