Personal tools
You are here: Home Knowledge Model REPOSITORY of Terms M Monitoring Architecture Distribution

Monitoring Architecture Distribution

by Raman Kazhamiakin last modified Apr 26, 2012 22:35
— filed under:

Definitions

Term:
Monitoring Architecture Distribution
Domain: Cross-cutting issues
Engineering and Design
(KM-ED)
Adaptation and Monitoring
(KM-AM)
Quality Definition, Negotiation and Assurance
(KM-QA)
Generic
(domain independent)
D
o
m
a
i
n
:
L
a
y
e
r
s

Business Process Management
(KM-BPM)




Service Composition and Coordination
(KM-SC)




Service Infrastructure
(KM-SI)

The distribution of a Grid monitoring system's actors falls into one of four categories:
  • Level 0, where monitoring events flow from information sources to clients/consumers directly;
  • Level 1 is where information sources are separated from the clients by an event repository and accessible through an API;
  • a Level 2 system features at least one republisher in the previous (level 1) configuration;
  • Level 3 systems contain a hierarchy of republishers between the provider and client.
[Zanikolas, 2004]


Generic
(domain independent)

A characteristic of the monitoring architecture that defines how the components of the framework are logically and physically located. In case of distributed architectures, the components are placed on a separate remote platforms and collaborate with each other in order to evaluate certain property over the monitored SBA. In case of centralized architectures, the monitoring framework represents a centralized component that is physically co-located with the information sources and overlooks the application execution. [CD-JRA-1.2.2]


 

Competencies

 

References

  • [CD-JRA-1.2.2] Taxonomy of adaptation principles and mechanisms
  • [Zanikolas, 2004] S. Zanikolas and R. Sakellariou. A Taxonomy of Grid Monitoring Systems. Future Generation Computer Systems, 21(2005):163–188, October 2004.
 
Document Actions
  • Send this
  • Print this
  • Bookmarks

The Plone® CMS — Open Source Content Management System is © 2000-2017 by the Plone Foundation et al.