DocumentCode :
3234574
Title :
Brittle metrics in operating systems research
Author :
Mogul, Jeffrey C.
Author_Institution :
Western Res. Lab., Compaq Comput. Corp., Palo Alto, CA, USA
fYear :
1999
fDate :
1999
Firstpage :
90
Lastpage :
95
Abstract :
Most operating systems research publications make claims about performance. We expect these performance claims to be both repeatable and relevant to important applications. We also expect them to be comparable to similar claims made in other papers. This implies the need for realistic and widely-used benchmarks. Often, however, no such benchmark exists. The problem is especially acute in application areas with significant external latencies (such as Internet servers and file systems). Sometimes this leads researchers to measure only what is easily measured. Sometimes it leads to the naive use of unrealistic benchmarks, causing research to be diverted from solving actual problems. A serious project to put operating systems research on a sound quantitative basis requires us to make an explicit effort to develop repeatable, comparable and realistic metrics for evaluating operating systems research. We must also develop reliable techniques for using benchmark results to predict real-world performance
Keywords :
operating systems (computers); research and development management; software metrics; software performance evaluation; Internet servers; benchmarks; brittle metrics; comparable metrics; external latencies; file systems; operating systems research; performance; realistic metrics; repeatable metrics; Application software; Benchmark testing; Computer architecture; Delay; File servers; File systems; Internet; Laboratories; Operating systems; Web server;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Hot Topics in Operating Systems, 1999. Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Rio Rico, AZ
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0237-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HOTOS.1999.798383
Filename :
798383
Link To Document :
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