10 research outputs found

    A Generic Network and System Management Framework

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    Networks and distributed systems have formed the basis of an ongoing communications revolution that has led to the genesis of a wide variety of services. The constantly increasing size and complexity of these systems does not come without problems. In some organisations, the deployment of Information Technology has reached a state where the benefits from downsizing and rightsizing by adding new services are undermined by the effort required to keep the system running. Management of networks and distributed systems in general has a straightforward goal: to provide a productive environment in which work can be performed effectively. The work required for management should be a small fraction of the total effort. Most IT systems are still managed in an ad hoc style without any carefully elaborated plan. In such an environment the success of management decisions depends totally on the qualification and knowledge of the administrator. The thesis provides an analysis of the state of the art in the area of Network and System Management and identifies the key requirements that must be addressed for the provisioning of Integrated Management Services. These include the integration of the different management related aspects (i.e. integration of heterogeneous Network, System and Service Management). The thesis then proposes a new framework, INSMware, for the provision of Management Services. It provides a fundamental basis for the realisation of a new approach to Network and System Management. It is argued that Management Systems can be derived from a set of pre-fabricated and reusable Building Blocks that break up the required functionality into a number of separate entities rather than being developed from scratch. It proposes a high-level logical model in order to accommodate the range of requirements and environments applicable to Integrated Network and System Management that can be used as a reference model. A development methodology is introduced that reflects principles of the proposed approach, and provides guidelines to structure the analysis, design and implementation phases of a management system. The INSMware approach can further be combined with the componentware paradigm for the implementation of the management system. Based on these principles, a prototype for the management of SNMP systems has been implemented using industry standard middleware technologies. It is argued that development of a management system based on Componentware principles can offer a number of benefits. INSMware Components may be re-used and system solutions will become more modular and thereby easier to construct and maintain

    A mid-level framework for independent network services configuration management

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    Tese doutoramento do Programa Doutoral em TelecomunicaçõesDecades of evolution in communication network’s resulted in a high diversity of solutions, not only in terms of network elements but also in terms of the way they are managed. From a management perspective, having heterogeneous elements was a feasible scenario over the last decades, where management activities were mostly considered as additional features. However, with the most recent advances on network technology, that includes proposals for future Internet as well as requirements for automation, scale and efficiency, new management methods are required and integrated network management became an essential issue. Most recent solutions aiming to integrate the management of heterogeneous network elements, rely on the application of semantic data translations to obtain a common representation between heterogeneous managed elements, thus enabling their management integration. However, the realization of semantic translations is very complex to be effectively achieved, requiring extensive processing of data to find equivalent representation, besides requiring the administrator’s intervention to create and validate conversions, since contemporary data models lack a formal semantic representation. From these constrains a research question arose: Is it possible to integrate the con g- uration management of heterogeneous network elements overcoming the use of manage- ment translations? In this thesis the author uses a network service abstraction to propose a framework for network service management, which comprehends the two essential management operations: monitoring and configuring. This thesis focus on describing and experimenting the subsystem responsible for the network services configurations management, named Mid-level Network Service Configuration (MiNSC), being the thesis most important contribution. The MiNSC subsystem proposes a new configuration management interface for integrated network service management based on standard technologies that includes an universal information model implemented on unique data models. This overcomes the use of management translations while providing advanced management functionalities, only available in more advanced research projects, that includes scalability and resilience improvement methods. Such functionalities are provided by using a two-layer distributed architecture, as well as over-provisioning of network elements. To demonstrate MiNSC’s management capabilities, a group of experiments was conducted, that included, configuration deployment, instance migration and expansion using a DNS management system as test bed. Since MiNSC represents a new architectural approach, with no direct reference for a quantitative evaluation, a theoretical analysis was conducted in order to evaluate it against important integrated network management perspectives. It was concluded that there is a tendency to apply management translations, being the most straightforward solution when integrating the management of heterogeneous management interfaces and/or data models. However, management translations are very complex to be realized, being its effectiveness questionable for highly heterogeneous environments. The implementation of MiNSC’s standard configuration management interface provides a simplified perspective that, by using universal configurations, removes translations from the management system. Its distributed architecture uses independent/universal configurations and over-provisioning of network elements to improve the service’s resilience and scalability, enabling as well a more efficient resource management by dynamically allocating resources as needed

    Service-oriented architecture for device lifecycle support in industrial automation

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    Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de Computadores Especialidade: Robótica e Manufactura IntegradaThis thesis addresses the device lifecycle support thematic in the scope of service oriented industrial automation domain. This domain is known for its plethora of heterogeneous equipment encompassing distinct functions, form factors, network interfaces, or I/O specifications supported by dissimilar software and hardware platforms. There is then an evident and crescent need to take every device into account and improve the agility performance during setup, control, management, monitoring and diagnosis phases. Service-oriented Architecture (SOA) paradigm is currently a widely endorsed approach for both business and enterprise systems integration. SOA concepts and technology are continuously spreading along the layers of the enterprise organization envisioning a unified interoperability solution. SOA promotes discoverability, loose coupling, abstraction, autonomy and composition of services relying on open web standards – features that can provide an important contribution to the industrial automation domain. The present work seized industrial automation device level requirements, constraints and needs to determine how and where can SOA be employed to solve some of the existent difficulties. Supported by these outcomes, a reference architecture shaped by distributed, adaptive and composable modules is proposed. This architecture will assist and ease the role of systems integrators during reengineering-related interventions throughout system lifecycle. In a converging direction, the present work also proposes a serviceoriented device model to support previous architecture vision and goals by including embedded added-value in terms of service-oriented peer-to-peer discovery and identification, configuration, management, as well as agile customization of device resources. In this context, the implementation and validation work proved not simply the feasibility and fitness of the proposed solution to two distinct test-benches but also its relevance to the expanding domain of SOA applications to support device lifecycle in the industrial automation domain

    The internet integrated intelligent network

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    This thesis is based on research, design and prototype implementation work done towards defining an Intelligent Network system integrated with Internet functionality and potential services to be provided by such a system. The main driving force behind the project has been an idea to explore the possibility of adding value to services offered by the two most ubiquitous public communication networks of today, by connecting those networks. The goal of the project was to define such a connection and the services that would become possible through its existence. The thesis begins with presenting the background to the project. First of all, it contains the definition and description of Intelligent Networks, as the standard means of providing, in telephone networks, services other than basic connectivity. Further, it defines the Internet and looks at the already existent computer network - telephone network integration systems. In the second part of the thesis, the design of the Internet-Integrated Intelligent Network (DIN) system is laid out. The IHN has been defined using definition methods already standard for the IN, as far as this was possible with regard to the entirely different nature of the Internet. The fundamental role of the World Wide Web Internet application in the functioning of the designed system is shown. Following the research and design work description is an account of the implementation work done to build an IIIN prototype and a group of sample services chosen and implemented to demonstrate IIIN functionality. This account includes a list of demonstration scenarios that have successfully been tested on the system prototype

    An object-oriented component-based approach to building real-time software systems

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    A project report submitted to the Faculty of Erlglncerlng, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science In Engineering Johannesburg 1993This Project Repolt r ''"lorts on the study of an approach to building integrated real-time software systems based on re-usable object-oriented components. The basis of the approach is the development of a a-layered structure of components, where each layer is built on the underlying layer of components, The lower layer of components consists of generic re-usable building blocks that may be re-used for building and integrating other real-time applications. The middle layer consists of components that are generic to the application domain, and the top layer consists of components that are specific to each application of that application domain. The Report includes researching and developing methods of communicating between these building blocks using an OSI/CMIP-conformant 'software highway" and in this regard particular attention is given to the formal and de facto industry standards. With this approach, it is argued that the application engineer can effectively build new applications using the re-usable components. This is demonstrated by reporting on the implementation of a large real-world Telecommunications Network Management application. The Project Report contains a critical analysis of the technical, organisational and project management issues of this Object-oriented component approach as compared to the traditional development approach. The Report concludes that despite certain technical and organisational concerns, the object-oriented approach does indeed yield several worthwhile benefits for developing real-time software systems. These benefits include genuine re-usability, and l"1proved productivity, testability and maintainability

    Proceedings of the ICSE 99 Workshop on Engineering Distributed Objects, May 1999, Los Angeles, California

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    European Information Technology Observatory 1999

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    Naval Postgraduate School Catalog 2016

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    Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited

    GVSU Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog, 2021-2022

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    Grand Valley State University 2021-2022 undergraduate and graduate course catalog. Course catalogs are published annually to provide students with information and guidance for enrollment.https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/course_catalogs/1096/thumbnail.jp
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