| A. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, "Active Objects in TMN," Fifth IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management, San Diego, California, U.S.A., May, 1997, pp. 139-150. |
....as a generalization of the concept of management by delegation [2] They are focusing on using mobile code for building an active management middleware, i.e. a software layer between the management applications and the managed objects (MOs) that represent physical or other local resources. In [3] new classes of MOs, called active managed objects (AMOs) are proposed for event discrimination and aggregation of monitoring data. The behavior of AMOs is defined in a scripting language. The scripts encoding this behavior stored as values of AMO attributes. Therefore, the behavior of AMOs can ....
A. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, "Active Objects in TMN," Fifth IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management, San Diego, California, U.S.A., May, 1997, pp. 139-150.
....as a generalization of the concept of management by delegation [1] They are focusing on using mobile code for building an active management middle ware, i.e. a software layer between the management applications and the managed objects (MOs) that represent physical or other local resources. In [2] new classes of MOs, called active managed objects (AMOs) are proposed for event discrimination and aggregation of monitoring data. The behavior of AMOs is defined in a scripting language. The scripts encoding this behavior stored as values of AMO attributes. Therefore, the behavior of AMOs can ....
A. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, "Active Objects in TMN," Fifth IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM'97), San Diego, 1997.
....as a generalization of the concept of management by delegation [8] They are focusing on using mobile code for building an active management middle ware, i.e. a software layer between the management applications and the managed objects (MOs) that represent physical or other local resources. In [9] new classes of MOs, called active managed objects Figure 6: Example Application: Active Packet Tracer Service Management Station Node 0 Node 1 and Node 2 An event originating in a service component A trace of an active packet on SMgt. node (not aggregated) the service creation active ....
A. Vassila et al., "Active Objects in TMN," Fifth IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM'97), 1997.
....as a generalization of the concept of management by delegation [2] They are focusing on using mobile code for building an active management middleware, i.e. a software layer between the management applications and the managed objects (MOs) that represent physical or other local resources. In [3] new classes of MOs, called active managed objects (AMOs) are proposed for event discrimination and aggregation of monitoring data. The behavior of AMOs is defined in a scripting language. The scripts encoding this behavior stored as values of AMO attributes. Therefore, the behavior of AMOs can ....
A. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, "Active Objects in TMN," Fifth IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM'97), San Diego, U.S.A., May, 1997, pp. 139-150.
.... of moving management logic close to the data it requires is a technique that has been conceived early in the evolution of management architectures, the relevant framework known as management by delegation [4] Subsequent research showed the applicability of this concept in the context of OSI SM [5] while a similar approach was subsequently standardized, the Command Sequencer Systems Management Function (SMF) More recently, the same concept has been proposed in the context of SNMP through the Scripting MIB. While such approaches are specific to the respective management frameworks, ....
N. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, Active Objects in TMN, in Integrated Network Management V, Lazar, Saracco, Stadler, eds., pp. 139-150, Chapman & Hall, 1997.
.... of moving management logic close to the data it requires is a technique that has been conceived early in the evolution of management architectures, the relevant framework known as management by delegation [4] Subsequent research showed the applicability of this concept in the context of OSI SM [5] with a similar approach subsequently standardized, the Command Sequencer Systems Management Function (SMF) More recently, the same concept has been proposed in the context of SNMP through the IETF Script MIB [8] While such approaches are specific to the respective management frameworks, the ....
N. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, Active Objects in TMN, in Integrated Network Management V, Lazar, Saracco, Stadler, eds., pp. 139-150, Chapman & Hall, 1997.
.... of moving management logic close to the data it requires is a technique that has been conceived early in the evolution of management architectures, the relevant framework known as management by delegation [4] Subsequent research showed the applicability of this concept in the context of OSI SM [5] while a similar approach was subsequently standardized, the Command Sequencer Systems Management Function (SMF) More recently, the same concept has been proposed in the context of SNMP through the Scripting MIB. While such approaches are specific to the respective management frameworks, ....
N. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, Active Objects in TMN, in Integrated Network Management V, Lazar, Saracco, Stadler, eds., pp. 139-150, Chapman & Hall, 1997.
.... of both computer and communications technologies, network managers are now demanding Distributed Network Management (DNM) 24] in contrast with more traditional centralised or weakly distributed hierarchical management models [2, 4] Traditional management has, in fact, proven to lack flexibility [6, 7, 8, 10, 14, 17] and scalability [11, 13, 21, 22] and fit badly with the current technological trends which are characterised by an increasing availability of distributed computational resources contrasted by a moderate increment of bandwidth available over the Internet. For instance, in the SNMP management, ....
....paradigms, which can fulfil the scalability, flexibility, and robustness requirements of the current and future massive distributed systems. The Management by Delegation (MbD) paradigm [10] seems to have achieved a widespread interest [6, 9, 15, 16] to have triggered many similar investigations [7, 8, 17, 18, 19, 20], and to be a particularly promising approach to deal with the limitations of traditional management systems. Mobile Code Paradigms and Network Management Mobile code paradigms have recently raised interest as a new family of programming languages, usually referred to as mobile code languages ....
A. Vassila, G. Pavlou, G. Knight, Active Objects in TMN. ISINM '97, San Diego, USA, May 12-16 1997.
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