Title :
Autonomics in telecommunications service activation
Author :
Magrath, S. ; Chiang, F. ; Markovits, S. ; Braun, R. ; Cuervo, F.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Inf. & Commun. Technol., Univ. of Technol., Sydney, NSW, Australia
Abstract :
The motivation for this paper is to extend the state of the art in distributed autonomics praxis as applied to telecommunications network management. We describe how the task assignment problem, common in telecommunications service activation workflow processes, can be effectively solved through the use of distributed autonomic auction agents. In doing so, we present our telecommunications service architecture that locates autonomic mechanisms. We describe a formal framework for the autonomic mechanism based on Holland´s adaptation theory. We then present the results of an experimental simulation study that shows that the autonomic mechanism provides near optimal performance for the problem, whilst conferring significant advantages over other common implementations in terms of robustness, scalability and disaster recovery. We conclude that autonomic mechanisms confer significant advantages to TMN, but it does so by hiding complexity rather than simplifying the system operations as has sometimes been reported.
Keywords :
distributed processing; software agents; telecommunication network management; telecommunication services; Holland adaptation theory; disaster recovery; distributed autonomic auction agent; distributed autonomics praxis; formal framework; system operation simplification; task assignment problem; telecommunication network management; telecommunication service activation; telecommunication service architecture; Australia; Communications technology; Context-aware services; Disaster management; Robustness; Scalability; Technological innovation; Technology management; Telecommunication network management; Telecommunication services;
Conference_Titel :
Autonomous Decentralized Systems, 2005. ISADS 2005. Proceedings
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8963-8
DOI :
10.1109/ISADS.2005.1452183