Title :
Continuous Evolution of Multi-tenant SaaS Applications: A Customizable Dynamic Adaptation Approach
Author :
Gey, Fatih ; Van Landuyt, Dimitri ; Joosen, Wouter ; Jonckers, Viviane
Author_Institution :
iMinds-DistriNet, KU Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium
Abstract :
Applying application-level multi-tenancy in Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) offerings yields a number of compelling benefits: sharing a single instance of the application between large numbers of customer organizations increases cost efficiency and allows the SaaS provider to attain true economies-of-scale benefits. There is however a main downside to this: increased sharing of resources causes the SaaS application to be very difficult to modify after initial development and deployment without affecting service continuity: any change potentially affects the service levels promised to all enrolled tenant organizations and their end users. This rigidity is a key impediment as now the SaaS provider must evolve and maintain the SaaS offering at run time, on a gradual, per-tenant basis. This in turn causes a reality of multiple co-existing versions of individual components and as such introduces substantial management complexity. To address these challenges, this paper motivates and defines key requirements that allows per-tenant, SLA-aware and gradual upgrades in the context of multi-tenant SaaS applications. In addition, we define an approach that allows the involved stakeholders (tenants, SaaS operators, SaaS developers, etc.) to customize the dynamic enactment of upgrades, and provide a number of alternative software upgrade strategies that represent different service quality trade-offs.
Keywords :
cloud computing; organisational aspects; software maintenance; software management; SLA-aware; alternative software upgrade strategies; application-level multitenancy; continuous multitenant SaaS application evolution; cost efficiency; customer organizations; customizable dynamic adaptation approach; dynamic upgrade enactment; enrolled tenant organizations; gradual upgrades; resource sharing; service levels; service quality trade-offs; software-as-a-service; substantial management complexity; true economies-of-scale benefits; Context; Middleware; Organizations; Software as a service; Stakeholders; Tin;
Conference_Titel :
Principles of Engineering Service-Oriented and Cloud Systems (PESOS), 2015 IEEE/ACM 7th International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Florence
DOI :
10.1109/PESOS.2015.10