On the dynamic quality of service in wireless computing environments

Author(s):  
C. Ben Ahmed ◽  
N. Boudriga ◽  
M.S. Obaidat
2009 ◽  
pp. 328-365
Author(s):  
Enis Afgan ◽  
Purushotham Bangalore ◽  
Jeff Gray

Grid computing environments are dynamic and heterogeneous in nature. In order to realize application- specific Quality of Service agreements within a grid, specifications at the level of an application are required. This chapter introduces an XML-based schema language (called the Application Specification Language, ASL) and a corresponding modeling tool that can be used to describe applications in grid computing environments. Such application descriptions allow derivation of guided and autonomic service developments for installation and invocation routines throughout the grid. In order to promote the language and ease the application description process, a domain-specific tool is also introduced. Based on our experience, the ASL in combination with higher level models improves, simplifies and promotes the grid application deployment process while simultaneously minimizing tedious and error-prone tasks such as manual application description composition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 729-752
Author(s):  
Muhammad Hasnain ◽  
Seung Ryul Jeong ◽  
Muhammad Fermi Pasha ◽  
Imran Ghani

2012 ◽  
pp. 312-348
Author(s):  
Enis Afgan ◽  
Purushotham Bangalore ◽  
Jeff Gray

Grid computing environments are dynamic and heterogeneous in nature. In order to realize application-specific Quality of Service agreements within a grid, specifications at the level of an application are required. This chapter introduces an XML-based schema language (called the Application Specification Language, ASL) and a corresponding modeling tool that can be used to describe applications in grid computing environments. Such application descriptions allow derivation of guided and autonomic service developments for installation and invocation routines throughout the grid. In order to promote the language and ease the application description process, a domain-specific tool is also introduced. Based on our experience, the ASL in combination with higher level models improves, simplifies and promotes the grid application deployment process while simultaneously minimizing tedious and error-prone tasks such as manual application description composition.


2000 ◽  
Vol 01 (03) ◽  
pp. 247-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. LELE ◽  
S. K. NANDY ◽  
D. H. J. EPEMA

Future mobile multimedia systems will have wearable computing devices as their front ends, supported by database servers, I/O servers, and compute servers over a backbone network. Multimedia applications on such systems are demanding in terms of network and compute resources, and have stringent Quality of Service (QoS) requirements. Providing QoS has two aspects. On the one hand, the QoS requirements for the relevant resources have to be defined and suitable policies for meeting these requirements have to be devised and analyzed. On the other hand, the architecture of the system components and the mechanisms enabling the implementation of these policies have to be designed. In this paper we propose an architecture called HARMONY for providing QoS in mobile computing environments. The HARMONY architecture is a layered architecture that provides mechanisms for the management of network and compute resources, in particular for call admission control taking into account the simultaneous requests for both types of resources by the mobile units. It also provides a mechanism for mobility management of mobile units as they move from one cell to another in a mobile computing environment. The network resources are reserved based on the Entropy model. In order to provide compute guarantees, we provide a novel scheme for off-loading tasks from the mobile units to the compute servers in the backbone network. We propose a load-balancing scheme to minimize the call blocking probability due to lack of compute resources, which redistributes the total load in the system across all compute servers so that these are equally loaded. Through a quantitative analysis of the HARMONY architecture we establish its effectiveness in providing quality of service in mobile computing environments.


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