• DocumentCode
    270654
  • Title

    On the Use of Traffic Information to Improve the Coordinated P2P Detection of SLA Violations

  • Author

    Nobre, Jéferson C. ; Granville, Lisandro Z. ; Clemm, Alexander ; Gonzalez Prieto, Alberto

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. of Inf., Fed. Univ. of Rio Grande do Sul, Rio Grande, Brazil
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    13-16 May 2014
  • Firstpage
    613
  • Lastpage
    620
  • Abstract
    Critical networked services are usually regulated by Service Level Agreements (SLAs). In order to ensure SLAs are being met, it is necessary to monitor Service Level Objectives (SLOs). Active measurement mechanisms are usually chosen to perform this monitoring task, which requires measurement probes to be activated in network devices. However, these probes are expensive in terms of computational resources consumption, thus, active measurement mechanisms usually can cover only a fraction of what could be measured, which can lead to SLA violations being missed. Besides that, highly dynamic networking patterns require the ongoing selection of the candidate network destinations for probing and their respective prioritization, a practice that is not well suited for human administrators because configuring the probes is labor-intensive and error-prone. A possibility to improve the detection of SLA violations is the employment of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) technology in order to steer tasks related to a distributed decision making process for probe activation. In this context, a P2P management overlay can be used to coordinate the probe activation and to share measurement results among the network devices. For a node to rely on measurement data from a peer to determine which probes to configure, it needs to know which of the peers are best correlated with itself, i.e., which nodes have the most significance in terms of being indicative of service level violations that might be observed by the node itself. We propose an autonomic P2P solution to coordinate the placement of active measurement probes in large-scale networks. The edge nodes of the network cooperate via a P2P management overlay to determine what destinations should be monitored. Each edge node determines autonomously what destinations to probe considering local measurements and measurement data from other edge nodes. The measurements considered are traffic information from passive measurement results and past service - evel measurement results from active measurement results. The proposed solution is evaluated using simulation and the results show its feasibility and interesting features.
  • Keywords
    contracts; decision making; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication traffic; P2P management overlay; SLA violations; SLO; active measurement mechanisms; autonomic P2P solution; candidate network destinations; computational resources consumption; coordinated P2P detection; critical networked services; distributed decision making process; dynamic networking patterns; local measurements; passive measurement results; peer-to-peer technology; probe activation; service level agreements; service level measurement results; service level objectives; traffic information; Coordinate measuring machines; IP networks; Monitoring; Peer-to-peer computing; Performance evaluation; Probes; Protocols; Network Management; P2P-Based Network Management; SLA;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Advanced Information Networking and Applications (AINA), 2014 IEEE 28th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Victoria, BC
  • ISSN
    1550-445X
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-3629-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AINA.2014.75
  • Filename
    6838721