Title :
Exogeneous Management in Autonomic Service Compositions
Author_Institution :
Swinburne Univ. of Technol., Hawthorn
Abstract :
This paper proposes that software architectures that support autonomic service-oriented computing need to have an exogenous management structure. Exogenous management regards autonomicity as a property of relationships between elements, rather than a property of the elements themselves. We explain the concept of exogenous management, and show how a number of desirable attributes that support autonomicity flow from this approach. These attributes include self- management; separability; recursive composition; and grounding through the monitoring of interactions. We will show how these attributes help enhance the adaptability and control the complexity of context- aware compositions of services. We then discuss how this exogenous approach to management has been implemented in the ROAD (Role-oriented Adaptive Design) programming framework. This framework is extended by software developers to create service compositions whose level of autonomicity can be incrementally modified at runtime.
Keywords :
object-oriented programming; open systems; software architecture; autonomic service-oriented computing; context-aware service composition; exogenous management structure; open system; role-oriented adaptive design programming; software architecture; Australia; Computer architecture; Context-aware services; Control systems; Environmental management; Runtime; Size control; Size measurement; Software architecture; Technology management;
Conference_Titel :
Autonomic and Autonomous Systems, 2007. ICAS07. Third International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Athens
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-2859-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-2859-7
DOI :
10.1109/CONIELECOMP.2007.74