2 research outputs found

    Consumer side resource accounting in cloud computing

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    PhD ThesisCloud computing services made available to consumers range from providing basic computational resources such as storage and compute power to sophisticated enterprise application services. A common business model is to charge consumers on a pay-per-use basis where they periodically pay for the resources they have consumed. The provider is responsible for measuring and collecting the resource usage data. This approach is termed provider-side accounting. A serious limitation of this approach is that consumers have no choice but to take whatever usage data that is made available by the provider as trustworthy. This thesis investigates whether it is possible to perform consumer-side resource accounting where a consumer independently collects, for a given cloud service, all the data required for calculating billing charges. If this were possible, then consumers will be able to perform reasonableness checks on the resource usage data available from service providers as well as raise alarms when apparent discrepancies are suspected in consumption figures. Two fundamental resources of cloud computing, namely, storage and computing are evaluated. The evaluation exercise reveals that the resource accounting models of popular cloud service providers, such as Amazon, are not entirely suited to consumer-side resource accounting, in that discrepancies between the data collected by the provider and the consumer can occur. The thesis precisely identifies the causes that could lead to such discrepancies and points out how the discrepancies can be resolved. The results from the thesis can be used by service providers to improve their resource accounting models. In particular, the thesis shows how an accounting model can be made strongly consumer–centric so that all the data that the model requires for calculating billing charges can be collected independently by the consumer. Strongly consumer–centric accounting models have the desirable property of openness and transparency, since service users are in a position to verify the charges billed to them.Cultural Affairs Department, Libyan Embassy, Londo

    A Peer to Peer Protocol for Online Dispute Resolution over Storage Consumption

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    In bilateral accounting of resource consumption both the consumer and provider independently measure the amount of resources consumed by the consumer. The problem here is that potential disparities between the provider's and consumer's accountings, might lead to conflicts between the two parties that need to be resolved. We argue that with the proper mechanisms available, most of these conflicts can be solved online, as opposite to in court resolution; the design of such mechanisms is still a research topic; to help cover the gap, in this paper we propose a peer--to--peer protocol for online dispute resolution over storage consumption. The protocol is peer--to--peer and takes into consideration the possible causes (e.g, transmission delays, unsynchronized metric collectors, etc.) of the disparity between the provider's and consumer's accountings to make, if possible, the two results converge.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
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