• Medientyp: E-Book; Konferenzbericht
  • Titel: Mechanisms for Autonomous Management of Networks and Services : 4th International Conference on Autonomous Infrastructure, Management and Security, AIMS 2010, Zurich, Switzerland, June 23-25, 2010. Proceedings
  • Beteiligte: Stiller, Burkhard [Verfasser:in]; Turck, Filip [Sonstige Person, Familie und Körperschaft]
  • Erschienen: Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010
  • Erschienen in: Lecture notes in computer science ; 6155
    Bücher
  • Umfang: Online-Ressource (XIII, 179p. 66 illus, digital)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-13986-4
  • ISBN: 9783642139864
  • Identifikator:
  • RVK-Notation: SS 4800 : Lecture notes in computer science
  • Schlagwörter: Netzwerkverwaltung > Autonomic Computing > Netzwerktopologie > Dienstgüte
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen:
  • Beschreibung: Keynote -- Facing Complexity in Systems Management -- P2P-Based Systems -- Modeling User Behavior in P2P Live Video Streaming Systems through a Bayesian Network -- OMAN – A Management Architecture for P2P Service Overlay Networks -- Towards a P2P-Based Deployment of Network Management Information -- Autonomous Management -- On the Combined Behavior of Autonomous Resource Management Agents -- Autonomous Resource-Aware Scheduling of Large-Scale Media Workflows -- An Autonomic Testing Framework for IPv6 Configuration Protocols -- PhD Workshop: Overlays and Non-conventional Network Infrastructures -- Researching Multipath TCP Adoption -- Report- and Reciprocity-Based Incentive Mechanisms for Live and On-Demand P2P Video Streaming -- Model-Driven Service Level Management -- Managing Risks at Runtime in VoIP Networks and Services -- Towards Dynamic and Adaptive Resource Management for Emerging Networks -- Adaptive Underwater Acoustic Communications -- Short Papers -- Probabilistic Fault Diagnosis in the MAGNETO Autonomic Control Loop -- Modelling Cloud Computing Infrastructure -- Towards an Autonomic Network Architecture for Self-healing in Telecommunications Networks -- LearnIT: Enhanced Search and Visualization of IT Projects -- Strategies for Network Resilience: Capitalising on Policies -- Management Mechanisms -- Automatic Link Numbering and Source Routed Multicast -- Mining NetFlow Records for Critical Network Activities -- Implementation of a Stream-Based IP Flow Record Query Language -- PhD Workshop: Security, Network Monitoring, and Analysis -- Towards Flexible and Secure Distributed Aggregation -- Intrusion Detection in SCADA Networks -- Cybermetrics: User Identification through Network Flow Analysis -- Distributed Architecture for Real-time Traffic Analysis -- Scalable Service Performance Monitoring.

    The International Conference on Autonomous Infrastructure, Management and Se- rity (AIMS 2010) was a single-track event integrating regular conference paper s- sions, tutorials, keynotes, and a PhD student workshop into a highly interactive event. The main goal of AIMS is to look beyond borders and to stimulate the exchange of ideas across different communities and among PhD students. AIMS 2010 collocated the International Summer School in Network and Service Management (ISSNSM 2010). This unique summer school offers hands-on learning experiences in network and service management topics, which requires attendees to work in practical on-site courses combined with preceding short tutorial-like teaching sessions. AIMS 2010––which took place during June 23–25, 2010, in Zürich, Switzerland and was hosted by the Communication Systems Group CSG, Department of Inform- ics IFI, of the University of Zürich UZH––followed the already established tradition of an unusually vivid and interactive conference series in terms of the fourth conf- ence, after successful instantiations in Oslo, Norway 2007, Bremen, Germany 2008, and Enschede, The Netherlands 2009. AIMS 2010 focused especially on autonomous management aspects of modern networks and their services. The set of mechanisms, peer-to-peer-based schemes, scalability aspects, and autonomous approaches are of major interest. In particular the design, monitoring, management, and protection of networked systems in an efficient, secure, and autonomic manner are key to comm- cially viable and successful networks and services.