Performance and dependability levels of cloud-based computations are difficult to guarantee by-design due to segregation of visibility and control between applications, data owners, and cloud providers. Lack of predictability increases users' uncertainty about the service levels they will actually achieve. Cloud tenants compete for shared resources/services at all layers of the cloud stack, and pose heterogeneous and conflicting non-functional requirements over them. These requirements have implications for platform and infrastructure layers, which have to be configured to satisfy inter-tenants requirements. We argue that adaptation techniques can play a crucial role in providing a reliable cloud, supporting definite behavior of applications and stable quality of service. We propose a multi-tenant, general-purpose adaptation technique for the cloud, based on evidence collected by means of a trustworthy certification process. We depart from traditional heavy and comprehensive certification processes and consider a flexible and lightweight certification process for the cloud. It is based on authentic evidence and provides accountable validation on the compliance of a cloud-based system. Our approach adapts the cloud at all layers to maintain stable non-functional properties in certificates over time, by continuously verifying certificate validity. We assess performance and quality of our approach in a wide range of settings.

Certification-Based Cloud Adaptation / C.A. Ardagna, R. Asal, E. Damiani, T. Dimitrakos, N. El Ioini, C. Pahl. - In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SERVICES COMPUTING. - ISSN 1939-1374. - 14:1(2021 Jan 01), pp. 82-96. [10.1109/TSC.2018.2793268]

Certification-Based Cloud Adaptation

C.A. Ardagna
Primo
;
E. Damiani;
2021

Abstract

Performance and dependability levels of cloud-based computations are difficult to guarantee by-design due to segregation of visibility and control between applications, data owners, and cloud providers. Lack of predictability increases users' uncertainty about the service levels they will actually achieve. Cloud tenants compete for shared resources/services at all layers of the cloud stack, and pose heterogeneous and conflicting non-functional requirements over them. These requirements have implications for platform and infrastructure layers, which have to be configured to satisfy inter-tenants requirements. We argue that adaptation techniques can play a crucial role in providing a reliable cloud, supporting definite behavior of applications and stable quality of service. We propose a multi-tenant, general-purpose adaptation technique for the cloud, based on evidence collected by means of a trustworthy certification process. We depart from traditional heavy and comprehensive certification processes and consider a flexible and lightweight certification process for the cloud. It is based on authentic evidence and provides accountable validation on the compliance of a cloud-based system. Our approach adapts the cloud at all layers to maintain stable non-functional properties in certificates over time, by continuously verifying certificate validity. We assess performance and quality of our approach in a wide range of settings.
Adaptive Systems; Certification; Cloud; Cloud computing; Encryption; Monitoring; Non-functional properties; Quality of service; Reliability; Scalability; Software as a service; Trust; Hardware and Architecture; Computer Science Applications1707 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition; Computer Networks and Communications; Information Systems and Management
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
1-gen-2021
2018
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/554823
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