1,416 research outputs found

    Web Service Composition Processes: A Comparative Study

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    Joint Energy Efficient and QoS-aware Path Allocation and VNF Placement for Service Function Chaining

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    Service Function Chaining (SFC) allows the forwarding of a traffic flow along a chain of Virtual Network Functions (VNFs, e.g., IDS, firewall, and NAT). Software Defined Networking (SDN) solutions can be used to support SFC reducing the management complexity and the operational costs. One of the most critical issues for the service and network providers is the reduction of energy consumption, which should be achieved without impact to the quality of services. In this paper, we propose a novel resource (re)allocation architecture which enables energy-aware SFC for SDN-based networks. To this end, we model the problems of VNF placement, allocation of VNFs to flows, and flow routing as optimization problems. Thereafter, heuristic algorithms are proposed for the different optimization problems, in order find near-optimal solutions in acceptable times. The performance of the proposed algorithms are numerically evaluated over a real-world topology and various network traffic patterns. The results confirm that the proposed heuristic algorithms provide near optimal solutions while their execution time is applicable for real-life networks.Comment: Extended version of submitted paper - v7 - July 201

    Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks - OMCO NET

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    The mini conference “Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks” focuses on advanced methods for search and optimisation applied to wireless communication networks. It is sponsored by Research & Enterprise Fund Southampton Solent University. The conference strives to widen knowledge on advanced search methods capable of optimisation of wireless communications networks. The aim is to provide a forum for exchange of recent knowledge, new ideas and trends in this progressive and challenging area. The conference will popularise new successful approaches on resolving hard tasks such as minimisation of transmit power, cooperative and optimal routing

    Evolutionary composition of QoS-aware web services: a many-objective perspective

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    Web service based applications often invoke services provided by third-parties in their workflow. The Quality of Service (QoS) provided by the invoked supplier can be expressed in terms of the Service Level Agreement specifying the values contracted for particular aspects like cost or throughput, among others. In this scenario, intelligent systems can support the engineer to scrutinise the service market in order to select those candidates that best fit with the expected composition focusing on different QoS aspects. This search problem, also known as QoS-aware web service composition, is characterised by the presence of many diverse QoS properties to be simultaneously optimised from a multi-objective perspective. Nevertheless, as the number of QoS properties considered during the design phase increases and a larger number of decision factors come into play, it becomes more difficult to find the most suitable candidate solutions, so more sophisticated techniques are required to explore and return diverse, competitive alternatives. With this aim, this paper explores the suitability of many-objective evolutionary algorithms for addressing the binding problem of web services on the basis of a real-world benchmark with 9 QoS properties. A complete comparative study demonstrates that these techniques, never before applied to this problem, can achieve a better trade-off between all the QoS properties, or even promote specific QoS properties while keeping high values for the rest. In addition, this search process can be performed within a reasonable computational cost, enabling its adoption by intelligent and decision-support systems in the field of service oriented computation.Junta de Andalucía P12-TIC-1867Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TIN2012-32273Junta de Andalucía TIC-5906Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TIN2014-55252-PMinisterio de Economía y Competitividad TIN2015- 71841-REDTMinisterio de Educación, Cultura y Deportes FPU13/0146

    Robust Multi-criteria Service Composition in Information Systems

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    Service compositions are used to implement business processes in a variety of application domains. A quality of service (QoS)-aware selection of the service to be composed involves multiple, usually conflicting and possibly uncertain QoS attributes. A multi-criteria solution approach is desired to generate a set of alternative service selections. In addition, the uncertainty of QoSattributes is neglected in existing solution approaches. Hence, the need for service reconfigurations is imposed to avoid the violation of QoS restrictions. The researched problem is NP-hard. This article presents a heuristic multicriteria service selection approach that is designed to determine a Pareto frontier of alternative service selections in a reasonable amount of time. Taking into account the uncertainty of response times, the obtained service selections are robust with respect to the constrained execution time. The proposed solution approach is based on the Nondominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm (NSGA)-II extended by heuristics that exploit problem specific characteristics of the QoS-aware service selection. The applicability of the solution approach is demonstrated by a simulation study

    A Taxonomy of Workflow Management Systems for Grid Computing

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    With the advent of Grid and application technologies, scientists and engineers are building more and more complex applications to manage and process large data sets, and execute scientific experiments on distributed resources. Such application scenarios require means for composing and executing complex workflows. Therefore, many efforts have been made towards the development of workflow management systems for Grid computing. In this paper, we propose a taxonomy that characterizes and classifies various approaches for building and executing workflows on Grids. We also survey several representative Grid workflow systems developed by various projects world-wide to demonstrate the comprehensiveness of the taxonomy. The taxonomy not only highlights the design and engineering similarities and differences of state-of-the-art in Grid workflow systems, but also identifies the areas that need further research.Comment: 29 pages, 15 figure

    Robustness estimation and optimisation for semantic web service composition with stochastic service failures

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    Service-oriented architecture (SOA) is a widely adopted software engineering paradigm that encourages modular and reusable applications. One popular application of SOA is web service composition, which aims to loosely couple web services to accommodate complex goals not achievable through any individual web service. Many approaches have been proposed to construct composite services with optimized Quality of Service (QoS), assuming that QoS of web services never changes. However, the constructed composite services may not perform well and may not be executable later due to its component services' failure. Therefore, it is important to build composite services that are robust to stochastic service failures. Two challenges of building robust composite services are to efficiently generate service composition with near-optimal quality in a large search space of available services and to accurately measure the robustness of composite services considering all possible failure scenarios. This article proposes a novel two-stage GA-based approach to robust web service composition with an adaptive evolutionary control and an efficient robustness measurement. This approach can generate robust composite service at the design phase, which can cope with stochastic service failures and maintain high quality at the time of execution. We have conducted experiments with benchmark datasets to evaluate the performance of our proposed approach. Our experiments show that our method can produce highly robust composite services, achieving outstanding performance consistently in the event of stochastic service failures, on service repositories with varying sizes

    The quality-aware service selection problem: an adaptive evolutionary approach

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    Die Qualität der Serviceerbringung (kurz QoS) ist ein wichtiger Aspekt in verteilten, Service-orientierten Systemen. Wenn mehrere Implementierungen einer Funktionalität koexistieren, kann die Wahl eines konkreten Services aufgrund von QoS-Aspekten getroffen werden. Leistung, Verfügbarkeit und Kosten sind Beispiele für QoS-Attribute eines Services. In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden Aspekte dieses Selektionsproblems anhand eines konkreten, Service-orientieren Systems vertieft. Es handelt sich dabei um das TAG-System in ATLAS, einem Hochenergiephysikexperiment am CERN, der Europäischen Organisation für Kernforschung. Die Daten und Services des TAG-Systems sind weltweit verteilt und müssen auf Anfrage selektiert und zu einem Workflow zusammengesetzt werden. Die Optimierung wird aus zwei unterschiedlichen Blickwinkeln. Die Selektion wird als ein dynamisches Pfadoptimierungsproblem unter Nebenbedingungen modelliert, wodurch QoS-Attribute sowohl der Knoten (Services) als auch der Kanten (Netzwerk) berücksichtigt werden können. Dynamische Aspekte des verteilten sind in der Problemformulierung integriert, da sie eine spezifische Herausforderung und Anforderung an Lösungsalgorithmen stellen. Für die dynamische Pareto-Optimierung von Serviceselektionsproblemen wird im Rahmen dieser Arbeit ein Optimierungsansatz mit einem genetischen Algorithmus präsentiert, der über einen persistenten Speicher von früheren Lösungen sowie eine automatische Adaptierung der Mutationsrate eine effiziente Anpassung an das sich ständig verändernde System gewährleistet. Eine Ontologie der Systemkomponenten sowie deren QoS-Attribute bildet die Basis für die Optimierung. Der Ansatz wird im Rahmen der Dissertation hinsichtlich der Qualität der erzielten Lösungen, der Adaptierung an änderungen sowie der Laufzeit evaluiert. Teile des Ansatzes wurden schließ lich in das TAG-System integriert und darin evaluiert.Quality of Service (QoS) is an important aspect in distributed, service-oriented systems. When several concrete services exist that implement the same functionality, the choice of a service instance among many can be made based on QoS considerations, objectives and constraints. Typically considered properties are performance, availability, and costs. In this thesis, aspects of the QoS-aware service selection problem are studied in the context of a distributed, service-oriented system from ATLAS, a high-energy physics experiment at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. In this so-called TAG system, data and modular services are distributed world-wide and need to be selected and composed on the fly, as a user starts a request. There are two conflicting optimization viewpoints. The service selection is modeled as a dynamic multi-constrained optimal path problem, which allows considering QoS attributes of service instances and of the network. The dynamic aspects of the system are included in the problem definition, as they represent a specific challenge. To address these issues regarding dynamics and conflicting viewpoints, this work proposes a service selection optimization framework based on a multi-objective genetic algorithm capable of efficiently dealing with changing conditions by using a persistent memory of good solutions, and a stepwise adaptation of the mutation rate. A system and QoS attribute ontology as well as a description of dynamics of distributed systems build the basis of the framework. The presented approach is evaluated in terms of optimization quality, adaptability to changes, runtime performance and scalability
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