Cloud Computing has been used by different types of clients because it has many advantages, including the minimization of infrastructure resources costs, and its elasticity property, which allows services to be scaled up or down according to the current demand. From the Cloud provider point-of-view, there are many challenges to be overcome in order to deliver Cloud services that meet all requirements defined in Service Level Agreements (SLAs). High availability has been one of the biggest challenges for providers, and many services can be used to improve the availability of a service, such as checkpointing, load balancing, and redundancy. Beyond services, we can also find infrastructure and middleware solutions. This systematic review has as its main goal to present and discuss high available (HA) solutions for Cloud Computing, and to introduce some research challenges in this area. We hope this work can be used as a starting point to understanding and coping with HA problems in Cloud.
Due to the growth of Cloud Computing, the supporting infrastructure has become more complex, and the centralized solutions suffer resource management difficulties due to the large scale and the dynamicity of the scenario. Consequently, distributed solutions have been proposed in the literature and the self-organizing ones have attracted particular interest due to their robustness and adaptability characteristics. Techniques, such as bio-inspired computing, multi-agent systems, and evolutionary techniques are used to manage resources. The main goal of this paper is to present a start study about how selforganizing solutions are applied in resource management of Cloud providers, as well as to highlight the main research challenges in this area.
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