Systematically Translating Service Level Objectives into Design and Operational Polic


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements UNIX and Linux RSS News Systematically Translating Service Level Objectives into Design and Operational Polic
# 1  
Old 02-22-2008
Systematically Translating Service Level Objectives into Design and Operational Polic

HPL-2008-16 Systematically Translating Service Level Objectives into Design and Operational Policies for Multi-Tier Applications - Chen, Yuan; Sahai, Akhil; Iyer, Subu; Milojicic, Dejan
Keyword(s): service level management, SLA, performance model, muti-tier applications
Abstract: We propose a systematic and practical approach that combines fine-grained performance modeling with regression analysis to translate Service Level Objectives (SLOs) into design and operational policies for multi-tier applications. These policies can then be used for designing a service to meet the S ...
Full Report

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Red Hat

SSL certificate generation on OS level or application level

We have a RHEL 5.8 server at the production level and we have a Java application on this server. I know of the SSL certificate generation at the OS (RHEL) level but it is implemented on the Java application by our development team using the Java keytool. My doubt is that is the SSL generation can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RHCE
3 Replies

2. Solaris

Difference between run level & init level

what are the major Difference Between run level & init level (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajaramrnb
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Translating the same file

I want to strip off '\032' character from a file using: tr -d '\032' < oldfile > newfile this outputs the contents of oldfile to newfile, but I wanna do that in the same file i.e. remove the \032 character from the old file. I tried: tr -d '\032' < oldfile > oldfile But the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gagan8877
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Ftp, telnet etc. not operational?

Well I have the programs and everything and the program itself seems to work, but they don't seem to be operateble. I ALWAYS get connection refused on everything. ftp, telnet, rlogin, ssh etc. So it must have something to do with some setting that doesn't allow connections to external hosts or... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: riwa
6 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
Munin::Node::Service(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Munin::Node::Service(3pm)

NAME
Munin::Node::Service - Methods related to handling of Munin services SYNOPSIS
my $services = Munin::Node::Service->new(timeout => 30); $services->prepare_plugin_environment; if ($services->is_a_runnable_service($file_name)) { $services->fork_service($file_name); } METHODS
new my $services = Munin::Node::Service->new(%args); Constructor. All arguments are optional. Valid arguments are: "servicedir" The directory that will be searched for services. "defuser", "defgroup" The default uid and gid that services will run as. Service-specific user and group directives (as set by the service configuration files) will override this. "timeout" The default timeout for services. Services taking longer than this to run will be killed. Service-specific timeouts will (as set in the service configuration files) will override this value. is_a_runnable_service my $bool = $services->is_a_runnable_service($file_name); Runs miscellaneous tests on $file_name in the service directory, to try and establish whether it is a runnable service. list my @services = $services->list; Returns a list of all the runnable services in the directory. prepare_plugin_environment $services->prepare_plugin_environment(@services); Carries out various tasks that plugins require before being run, such as loading service configurations and exporting common environment variables. export_service_environment $services->export_service_enviromnent($service); Exports all the environment variables specific to service $service. change_real_and_effective_user_and_group $service->change_real_and_effective_user_and_group($service); Changes the current process' effective group and user IDs to those specified in the configuration, or the default user or group otherwise. Also changes the real group and user IDs if the operating system supports it. On failure, causes the process to exit. exec_service $service->exec_service($service, [$argument]); Replaces the current process with an instance of service $service in $directory, running with the correct environment and privileges. This function never returns. The process will exit(2) if the service to be run failed the paranoia check. fork_service $result = $service->fork_service($service, [$argument]); Identical to exec_service(), except it runs the service in a subprocess. If the service takes longer than the timeout, it will be terminated. Returns a hash reference containing (among other things) the service's output and exit value. (See documentation for run_as_child() in Munin::Node::Service for a comprehensive description.) perl v5.14.2 2013-11-12 Munin::Node::Service(3pm)