TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards autonomic management of communications networks
AU - Jennings, Brendan
AU - van der Meer, Sven
AU - Balasubramaniam, Sasitharan
AU - Botvich, Dmitri
AU - Foghlú, Mícheál Ó
AU - Donnelly, William
AU - Strassner, John
N1 - Funding Information:
We wish to acknowledge the valuable insights provided by Nazim Agoulmine in the development of FOCALE and the work on prototype design and implementation performed by Keara Barrett, Alan Davy, Steven Davy, and Elyes Lehtihet. This work received support from Science Foundation Ireland under the Autonomic Management of Communications Networks and Services award (grant no. 04/IN3/I404C).
PY - 2007/10
Y1 - 2007/10
N2 - As communications networks become increasingly dynamic, heterogeneous, less reliable, and larger in scale, it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to effectively manage these networks using traditional approaches that rely on human monitoring and intervention to ensure they operate within desired bounds. Researchers and practitioners are pursuing the vision of autonomic network management, which we view as the capability of network entities to self-govern their behavior within the constraints of business goals that the network as a whole seeks to achieve. However, applying autonomic principles to network management is challenging for a number of reasons, including: • A means is required to enable business rules to determine the set of resources and/or services to be provided. • Contextual changes in the network must be sensed and interpreted, because new management policies may be required when context changes. • As context changes, it may be necessary to adapt the management control loops that are used to ensure that system functionality adapts to meet changing user requirements, business goals, and environmental conditions. • A means is required to verify modeled data and to add new data dynamically so that the system can learn and reason about itself and its environment. This article provides an introduction to the FOCALE autonomic network management architecture, which is designed to address these challenges.
AB - As communications networks become increasingly dynamic, heterogeneous, less reliable, and larger in scale, it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to effectively manage these networks using traditional approaches that rely on human monitoring and intervention to ensure they operate within desired bounds. Researchers and practitioners are pursuing the vision of autonomic network management, which we view as the capability of network entities to self-govern their behavior within the constraints of business goals that the network as a whole seeks to achieve. However, applying autonomic principles to network management is challenging for a number of reasons, including: • A means is required to enable business rules to determine the set of resources and/or services to be provided. • Contextual changes in the network must be sensed and interpreted, because new management policies may be required when context changes. • As context changes, it may be necessary to adapt the management control loops that are used to ensure that system functionality adapts to meet changing user requirements, business goals, and environmental conditions. • A means is required to verify modeled data and to add new data dynamically so that the system can learn and reason about itself and its environment. This article provides an introduction to the FOCALE autonomic network management architecture, which is designed to address these challenges.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=35348872609&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/MCOM.2007.4342833
DO - 10.1109/MCOM.2007.4342833
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:35348872609
SN - 0163-6804
VL - 45
SP - 112
EP - 121
JO - IEEE Communications Magazine
JF - IEEE Communications Magazine
IS - 10
ER -