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Towards an Agile Infrastructure to Provision Devices, Applications, and Networks: A Service-oriented Approach
Beijing, China July 24-July 27
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/COMPSAC.2007.2172007 31st Annual International Comput ...
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Sandy Liu, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada
Bruce Spencer, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada
Yong Liang, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada
Bo Xu, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada
Libo Zhang, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada
Martin Brooks, Institute for Information Technology, National Research Council Canada

Most industries and organizations use collections of tools, devices, and applications that are growing in complexity. New tools or applications may be acquired and old tools may become obsolete over time. They are often running on a variety of platforms, have different bandwidth and QoS requirements, and in most cases they cannot be accessed through a single point of entry. Moreover, some tools may require specific configurations done by technical experts. To address these issues, we propose an extensible, reliable, and simple software architecture that can hide the complexity of provisioning the network and running the tools. This paper introduces a service-oriented approach for creating an agile infrastructure to provision devices, applications, and their underlying networks.

The Eucalyptus prototype is developed as an empirical application to test this approach. Eucalyptus is built on a set of generic fine-grained Web Services to manage and configure available resources, where new resources can be custom-built or imported from a third party. They can be integrated into Eucalyptus using a set of Web Service-enabled APIs. Our user community consists of architects and industrial designers. Eucalyptus can manage and configure the resources needed by geographically distributed groups of architects who need to collaborate in real time on the design of buildings, in a virtual Participatory Design Studio (PDS). Eucalyptus provides a single point of entry for the architects to access a wide variety of tools: videoconference applications, visualization services, rendering services employing parallel computers, etc. Eucalyptus provides a set of upper layer services for users to provision devices and applications running on high-speed broadband networks, as well as the commercial IP networks.

Citation:
Sandy Liu, Bruce Spencer, Yong Liang, Bo Xu, Libo Zhang, Martin Brooks, "Towards an Agile Infrastructure to Provision Devices, Applications, and Networks: A Service-oriented Approach," compsac, vol. 2, pp.473-478, 2007 31st Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference, 2007
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