Heterogeneity, High Performance Computing, Self-Organization and the Cloud
John P. Morrison
Heterogeneity, High Performance Computing, Self-Organization and the Cloud - Palgrave Macmillan 2018 - 1 electronic resource (165 p.)
Open Access
This open access book addresses the most recent developments in cloud computing such as HPC in the Cloud, heterogeneous cloud, self-organising and self-management, and discusses the business implications of cloud computing adoption. Establishing the need for a new architecture for cloud computing, it discusses a novel cloud management and delivery architecture based on the principles of self-organisation and self-management. This focus shifts the deployment and optimisation effort from the consumer to the software stack running on the cloud infrastructure. It also outlines validation challenges and introduces a novel generalised extensible simulation framework to illustrate the effectiveness, performance and scalability of self-organising and self-managing delivery models on hyperscale cloud infrastructures. It concludes with a number of potential use cases for self-organising, self-managing clouds and the impact on those businesses.
Creative Commons
English
/doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76038-4 9783319760384 9783319760377
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76038-4 doi
resource management blueprints application supply chain PaaS Saas big data HPCaaS self-management self-organisation
Heterogeneity, High Performance Computing, Self-Organization and the Cloud - Palgrave Macmillan 2018 - 1 electronic resource (165 p.)
Open Access
This open access book addresses the most recent developments in cloud computing such as HPC in the Cloud, heterogeneous cloud, self-organising and self-management, and discusses the business implications of cloud computing adoption. Establishing the need for a new architecture for cloud computing, it discusses a novel cloud management and delivery architecture based on the principles of self-organisation and self-management. This focus shifts the deployment and optimisation effort from the consumer to the software stack running on the cloud infrastructure. It also outlines validation challenges and introduces a novel generalised extensible simulation framework to illustrate the effectiveness, performance and scalability of self-organising and self-managing delivery models on hyperscale cloud infrastructures. It concludes with a number of potential use cases for self-organising, self-managing clouds and the impact on those businesses.
Creative Commons
English
/doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76038-4 9783319760384 9783319760377
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76038-4 doi
resource management blueprints application supply chain PaaS Saas big data HPCaaS self-management self-organisation
