Title :
Specifying and Enforcing High-Level Semantic Obligation Policies
Author :
Liu, Zhen ; Ranganathan, Anand ; Riabov, Anton
Author_Institution :
IBM, Hawthorne
Abstract :
Obligation policies specify management actions that must be performed when a particular kind of event occurs and certain conditions are satisfied. Large scale distributed systems often produce event streams containing large volumes of low-level events. In many cases, these streams also contain multimedia data (consisting of text, audio or video). Hence, a key challenge is to allow policy writers to specify obligation policies based on high-level events, that may be derived after performing appropriate processing on raw, low-level events. In this paper, we propose a semantic obligation policy specification language called Eagle, which is based on patterns of high-level events, represented as RDF graph patterns. Our policy enforcement architecture uses a compiler that builds a workflow for producing a stream of events, which match the high-level event pattern specified in a policy. This workflow consists of a number of event sources and event processing components, which are described semantically. We present the policy language and enforcement architecture in this paper.
Keywords :
distributed processing; knowledge representation languages; ontologies (artificial intelligence); program compilers; software architecture; specification languages; Eagle; OWL; RDF graph patterns; compiler; event streams; large scale distributed systems; low-level events; management actions; multimedia data; ontologies; policy enforcement architecture; semantic obligation policy specification language; Data mining; Large-scale systems; OWL; Ontologies; Pattern matching; Resource description framework; Sensor systems and applications; Specification languages; Streaming media; Temperature sensors;
Conference_Titel :
Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks, 2007. POLICY '07. Eighth IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Bologna
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2767-1
DOI :
10.1109/POLICY.2007.41