Title :
An adaptive policy based management framework for differentiated services networks
Author :
Lymberopoulos, Leonidas ; Lupu, Emil ; Sloman, Morris
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput., Imperial Coll. of Sci., Technol. & Med., London, UK
Abstract :
This paper presents a framework for specifying policies for the management of differentiated services (DiffServ) networks. Although policy-based management has been the subject of intensifying research efforts, the proposed solutions are often restricted to condition-action rules where conditions are matched against incoming traffic flows. This results in static policy configurations where manual intervention is required to cater for configuration changes and to enable policy deployment. The framework presented supports automated policy deployment and flexible event triggers to permit dynamic policy configuration. Whilst current research focuses mostly on rules for low-level device configuration, significant challenges remain to be addressed in order to: 1) provide policy specification and adaptation across different abstraction layers; and 2) provide tools and services for the engineering of policy-driven systems. In particular, this paper focuses on solutions for dynamic adaptation of policy in DiffServ networks according to changes in requirements. Policy adaptation includes both dynamically changing policy parameters and reconfiguring the policy objects.
Keywords :
computer network management; quality of service; telecommunication traffic; DiffServ; adaptive policy based management; condition-action rules; differentiated service networks; dynamic policy adaptation; policy deployment; policy specification; quality of service; Adaptive systems; Computer network management; Computer networks; Diffserv networks; Educational institutions; Electrical capacitance tomography; IP networks; Protocols; Quality of service; Scalability;
Conference_Titel :
Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks, 2002. Proceedings. Third International Workshop on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1611-4
DOI :
10.1109/POLICY.2002.1011302