2002
DOI: 10.1007/3-540-36110-3_6
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Automated SLA Monitoring for Web Services

Abstract: Automating SLA monitoring involves minimizing human involvement in the overall monitoring process. SLA monitoring is difficult to automate as it would need precise and unambiguous specification and a customizable engine that collects the right measurement, models the data and evaluates the SLA at certain times or when certain events happen. Also most of the SLA neglect client side measurement or restrict SLAs to measurements based only on server side. In a cross-enerprise scenario like web services it will be … Show more

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Cited by 246 publications
(187 citation statements)
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“…Fortunately, other proposals do allow to assign a validity period to every condition of a demand or an offer, such as the IBM WSLA Web Services Level Agreement language [6,11] and the WSOL Web Service Offerings Language [23]. The HP WSML Web Services Level Agreement Management language [19] allows to specify both a single validity period for the entire agreement and also a periodic temporal interval to every condition. Both WSLA and WSML languages allow validity periods to be composed of multiple sub-intervals in distinct, limited ways as well.…”
Section: Proposals Based On Ad-hoc Formalismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fortunately, other proposals do allow to assign a validity period to every condition of a demand or an offer, such as the IBM WSLA Web Services Level Agreement language [6,11] and the WSOL Web Service Offerings Language [23]. The HP WSML Web Services Level Agreement Management language [19] allows to specify both a single validity period for the entire agreement and also a periodic temporal interval to every condition. Both WSLA and WSML languages allow validity periods to be composed of multiple sub-intervals in distinct, limited ways as well.…”
Section: Proposals Based On Ad-hoc Formalismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the work we have presented in [2] allows for an analysis of the impact that certain factors have on the performance of service compositions. SLA prediction as discussed in this paper has first been discussed in [8], which is based on some early work of HP Laboratories on SLA monitoring for Web services [9]. In [8], the authors introduced some concepts which are also present in our solution, such as the basic idea of using prediction models based on machine learning techniques, or the trade-off between early prediction and prediction accuracy.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although their approach has similarities to ours, their goals focus on runtime adaptability, and not on service compositions and their SLA dependencies. Sahai et al [14] aim at automated SLA monitoring by specifying SLAs and not only considering provider side guarantees but focus also on distributed monitoring, taking the client side into account as well. Barbon et al [15] enable run-time monitoring while separating business logic from monitoring functionality.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%