Semantic-based service analysis and optimization
Citation:
Liam Fallon, 'Semantic-based service analysis and optimization', [thesis], Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Computer Science & Statistics, 2013, pp 195Download Item:
Abstract:
The need to autonomically optimize end user service experience in near real time has been identified in the literature in recent years. Service management systems that
monitor end user service session context are deployed but approaches that estimate
end user service experience from session context do not analyse the compliance of
that experience with user expectations. Approaches that plan and execute actions to
optimize end user service session delivery are not applicable to arbitrary service
sessions; they work with specific service types and delivery mechanisms or do not
consider end user service experience when making optimization decisions. Another
barrier to autonomic end user service management optimization is the lack of a
holistic model for the domain.
This thesis proposes the Aesop approach, an approach that addresses semanticbased
autonomic optimization of end user service delivery. This approach has a
knowledge base at its core and proposes the EUSAO ontology. This ontology,
designed to semantically model the end user service management domain, enables
partitioning of knowledge that varies over time for efficient access. The Aesop
Engine is designed to execute an iteration of an autonomic loop (Monitor, Analyse,
Plan, Execute) in near real time. It runs semantic algorithms designed to use queries
and rules on subsets of the partitioned EUSAO-based knowledge in order to monitor
end user sessions, to analyse their compliance with expectations, to plan
optimizations, and to execute those optimizations as throttling actions on the service
delivery network. The semantic-based algorithms that are proposed are efficient
because they operate on small partitioned subsets of the knowledge base. The Aesop
approach allows arbitrary end user service types and network domains to be added
by specializing the EUSAO ontology for that domain and adding domain specific
semantic mappings, queries and rules. A case study has demonstrated that the
approach is applicable in the Mobile Broadband access domain.
A prototype implementation of the complete Aesop approach was evaluated on a
full purpose built Home Area Network test bed, on which execution of end user
service sessions was automated and controlled. In the evaluation, when the measured
compliance of a set of end user service sessions with expectations when Aesop
optimization was active was compared with the compliance of an identical set of
sessions when Aesop optimization was inactive, a significant improvement was
observed on the compliance levels of high priority sessions in all experimental
scenarios, with compliance levels more than doubled in some cases.
The key contribution of the Aesop approach is that it enables user centric service
delivery management. When used with other service specific and network centric
approaches, it shows promise as a method of optimizing an arbitrary running set of
end user service sessions so that they best meet the expectations of the individual
users running those service sessions. In addition, this research has addressed key
concerns that have inhibited the widespread adoption of semantic techniques by
showing that, with appropriate design and implementation, semantic techniques can
be efficient and can perform well, and are deployable in full autonomic systems that
execute in near real time.
Author: Fallon, Liam
Advisor:
O'Sullivan, DeclanPublisher:
Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Computer Science & StatisticsNote:
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