| Sloman M.S. (ed), Distributed System Management, in Issues in LAN Management, ed I. Dallas & E. Spratt, pp 15-46 North Holland 1988. |
....resources which are needed to carry out the goals. If they allocate money they are typically called Budgets. The background to this paper is work in Distributed System Management (DSM) particularly on the Conic [Magee 1989] and Domino [Law 1990] projects and in the Special Interest Group on DSM [Sloman 1987] In this context, distributed systems are those in which several autonomous computers, exchanging information over a communications network, cooperate to achieve goals. It has become apparent that work on DSM inevitably involves discussion of policies which have to be agreed and set up by ....
Sloman M.S. (ed), Distributed System Management, in Issues in LAN Management, ed I. Dallas & E. Spratt, pp 15-46 North Holland 1988.
....into a networked system. Examples for components are business and office software running on workstations or mainframes connected by network components like hubs, routers and switches [HAN99] There are also developers delivering management tools to support an operation of distributed systems [Slo94]. Customers focus on daily needs and choose services offered by providers. They need communication and application services to process business critical information. Customers also need support services in order to use IT services correctly. The quality demands of customers with regard to IT ....
Sloman, M., 1994, "Distributed Systems Management", Addison-Wesley.
....up a network, keep it operational and fine tune its operation. The management framework being developed by the International Standardization Organization (ISO) allows the management of a multivendor network components in a unified manner. The ISO management model consists of the following areas [1, 5, 6, 7]: 1) Performance management; 2) Configuration management; 3) Fault management; 4) Accounting management; and 5) Security management. The focus of the paper is on performance management which can be defined as the set of tools and functions needed to guarantee that the network meets its performance ....
M. SLOMAN, "Distributed systems management ", Issues in LAN management. Proc. of the IFIP/W6.4A workshop, Berlin 1988.
....a particular interface specification may be implemented in different templates. Thus there may be different implementations of an interface specification. A managed object will have at least one management interface, but will also have others which support the normal functionality of the object [Sloman 1988]. We confine ourselves to discussion of management interactions. The template defines the internal representation of attributes as well as the code for implementing interactions, and may also specify default values for attributes. 2.2 Managers The management model must cater for both human and ....
....19 10 8 90 provided as input to the U.K. Special Interest Group on Distributed Systems Management (SIGDSM) under the chairmanship of Dr. A. Langsford of Harwell, which is a forum for discussion of issues and problems related to management of distributed systems. The initial report of that group [Sloman 1988] identified requirements and refined the concept of domains as a framework for structuring management. The domain concept has been applied to the management of both capabilities and access control lists [Robinson 1988, Twidle 1988] 7.1 OSI Managed Objects Our managed objects have some sililarity ....
Sloman M.S. (ed), Distributed System Management, in Issues in LAN Management, ed I. Dallas & E. Spratt, pp 15-46, North Holland 1988.
No context found.
M. Sloman, "Distributed systems management", IFIP TC 6.4 LAN Management M. Sloman, "Distributed systems management", IFIP TC 6.4 LAN Management Workshop, Berlin, July 1987, North Holland.
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