58 research outputs found

    Policy-based autonomic control service

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    Recently, there has been a considerable interest in policy-based, goal-oriented service management and autonomic computing. Much work is still required to investigate designs and policy models and associate meta-reasoning systems for policy-based autonomic systems. In this paper we outline a proposed autonomic middleware control service used to orchestrate selfhealing of distributed applications. Policies are used to adjust the systems autonomy and define self-healing strategies to stabilize/correct a given system in the event of failures

    Weakly Trapped, Charged, and Free Excitons in Single-Layer MoS2 in the Presence of Defects, Strain, and Charged Impurities

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    Few- and single-layer MoS2 host substantial densities of defects. They are thought to influence the doping level, the crystal structure, and the binding of electron-hole pairs. We disentangle the concomitant spectroscopic expression of all three effects and identify to what extent they are intrinsic to the material or extrinsic to it, i.e., related to its local environment. We do so by using different sources of MoS2 - a natural one and one prepared at high pressure and high temperature - and different substrates bringing varying amounts of charged impurities and by separating the contributions of internal strain and doping in Raman spectra. Photoluminescence unveils various optically active excitonic complexes. We discover a defect-bound state having a low binding energy of 20 meV that does not appear sensitive to strain and doping, unlike charged excitons. Conversely, the defect does not significantly dope or strain MoS2. Scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory simulations point to substitutional atoms, presumably individual nitrogen atoms at the sulfur site. Our work shows the way to a systematic understanding of the effect of external and internal fields on the optical properties of two-dimensional materials

    An Instrumentation and Control-Based Approach for Distributed Application Management and Adaptation

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    Distributed applications are notoriously difficult to develop and manage due to their inherent dynamics and heterogeneity of component technologies and network protocols. Middleware technologies dramatically simplify the development of distributed applications, but they still prove difficult to manage at runtime. This paper considers the “on-going ” development of a framework that provides instrumentation and control services, which extend core middleware services, to realize the runtime management and adaptation of distributed applications. The instrumentation and control services are used in conjunction with dependency management utilities to measure performance, monitor behaviour and resolve the runtime inconsistencies and conflicts that may occur in distributed applications
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