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Article type: Research Article
Authors: White, Steve R.; * | Hanson, James E. | Whalley, Ian | Chess, David M. | Segal, Alla | Kephart, Jeffrey O.
Affiliations: IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, P.O. Box 218, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA. E-mail: srwhite@us.ibm.com, jehanson@us.ibm.com, inw@us.ibm.com, chess@us.ibm.com, segal@us.ibm.com, kephart@us.ibm.com
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author.
Abstract: The goal of autonomic computing is to reduce the complexity and cost of large-scale computing systems by endowing them with the ability to manage themselves in accordance with high-level objectives specified by humans. This paper presents an architectural approach to autonomic computing that is compatible with service-oriented and agent-oriented architectures, and is based upon interactions among system components that we call self-managing resources. This paper recommends, and in some cases requires, specific behaviors and interfaces for self-managing resources, and discusses how interactions and relationships among them are established. Furthermore, it recommends several design patterns that engender the desired system-level properties of self-configuration, self-optimization, self-healing and self-protection. It explores and validates these architectural principles with a prototype autonomic data center called Unity. In the context of the Unity prototype, the paper demonstrates the efficacy of several design patterns, including a self-optimization design pattern that employs utility functions as a form of high-level objective, a self-configuration design pattern for goal-driven self assembly, and a self-healing design pattern that employs sentinels and a simple cluster re-generation strategy.
DOI: 10.3233/ICA-2006-13206
Journal: Integrated Computer-Aided Engineering, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 173-188, 2006
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