CERCS - Creating System Solutions for Future Technologies

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Transcript CERCS - Creating System Solutions for Future Technologies

Event Processing in Operational Information
Systems:
Two Case Studies and BAM/EDA
Implications
Karsten Schwan, Brian Cooper, Greg Eisenhauer
Georgia Institute of Technology
Center for Experimental Research in Computer
Systems (CERCS)
NSF Industry University Co-operative Research Center
I. Delta Air Lines Operational Information Systems (OIS) –
Internal View
High event rates for simple/mediated events
Complex events processed/produced by business logic
I. Delta Air Lines OIS – External View
I. Continuous Event Processing in Delta’s OIS
– Complex systems and large event volumes
• TPF, DTMI, TIBCO, Tuxedo, Web Services; Mainframes, Clusters,
End Systems
– event services across multiple system `silos’
» interoperability APIs
» event filtering, replication, morphing
» JIT XML and event conversion – for outsources services
» runtime trust management vs. security?
– data tapping – for legacy systems (hardware support?)
– deep packet inspection/event morphing (system/network
support?)
I. Integrated BAM:
Continuously Managed Event Flows
– Complex system interactions and 24/7 operation:
• high reliability and availability: with stateful operation
– continuous monitoring and repair
» abnormal behavior (e.g., timeout behavior) detection, with
human intervention after thresholds exceeded
– `poison messages’ and poison message sequences
» avoid recovery and/or bound recovery time
• online performance management
– utility-based event scheduling/routing
» ability to distinguish service levels
– link to immediate business needs
» e.g., revenue management
– performance isolation vs. optimization
» e.g., isolation from recovery traffic
– NOTES: highly distributed event processing; most events carry business data
(additional BAM events); BASE, not ACID, for most events; multi-model event
processing, not SQL; STATEful processing
II. Worldspan:
Need for QoS in Business Monitoring
Utility Obtained from Worldspan’s Flight Search Engine
SLA-driven operation and online event scheduling:
• QoS in Business Monitoring for differentiated services
24/7 operation and stateful services:
• Management must include incremental updates of service state
Huge event volumes
Summary
Event-based Systems for the Enterprise Domain:
• GT Focus: Adaptive/Autonomic Distributed Information Flows
• IBM, Tata (iFlow: utility-based, autonomic management of distributed information flows;
performance isolation in web-based event flows; online monitoring and management
with Eclipse)
• HP (automated application deployment; QMon: QoS in business activity monitoring)
• Worldspan (`power udpates’: non-intrusive dynamic state updates; utility-based activity
monitoring)
• Delta, Raytheon (performance isolation/robustness; utility-driven failure management;
monitoring web-based infrastructures)
• Cisco, Intel (network-level services for event-based systems)
• NSF, DARPA, DOE (continual queries; ECho/IQ-ECho:publish/subscribe event system,
with resource-aware operation; EV(ent)Path: dynamic overlay creation and
management, with runtime event scheduing; event flows and mobility)
EDA/BAM Implications
• Multiple event/processing models
– Monitoring events, Business events, ...
• Interoperability
– Differently structured event data, eventually should include
unstructured data
• Complex, domain-specific event processing
– Importance of state
• state recovery/expiration
– Distributed data and processing
• Security/performance/reliability implications
– Importance of online management
• integrated into business event processing
• driven by end user utility
• strong QoS/real-time constraints
• Overlap/conflicts with AC (ICAC) (many companies involved!)
– Terminology:
• CBEs (events), touchpoints, symptoms/symptom databases, SLAs,
SLOs, ...
– Technology:
• non-intrusive instrumentation, ...
Georgia Tech Information Flow Research
To construct the interactive information grids of the future and to create the intellectual
capital that can advance these technologies and fuel future advances.
Enterprise
Computing
Embedded
Systems
Scientific
.Grid
Remote access to the
Information Grid
Brian Cooper
Ling Liu
Calton Pu
Kishore Ramachandran
Karsten Schwan
Continual Queries
ECho/IQ-ECho
Fusion Channels
IFlow/EVPath
Information anytime, anywhere 
Timeliness!
Robustness!
Quality!
Security and Trust!
Additional Insights
Enterprise Systems
• Utility-based mapping and configuration in:
– shared execution environments
High Performance Computing
• Large-data events in:
– simulation monitoring: e.g., remote data visualization
– GT Smartpointer application
Pervasive Systems
• Online path management in:
– situation monitoring and assessment
• Location-aware operation in:
– mobile end user systems
Research Agenda for Event-based Systems
•
I. Stateful Event Services:
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II. Resource- and Needs-Awareness:
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Diverse metrics: bandwidth, power, trust, ...
Changing end user needs, application behaviors
Performance monitoring/understanding: integrate across user and system levels
III. Runtime Management:
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Dynamic service and code deployment (DCG, dynamic compilation)
Runtime code modification and adaptation, dynamic data conversion
Dynamic state saving and updates (e.g., power updates)
Dynamic overlays, …
Utility-driven operation
New reliability and availability methods
`Vertical’ integration: user/system/network levels
Multi-dimensional optimization vs. performance robustness
IV. Open Infrastructures:
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App-level (e.g., `inside’ JMS) or `instrumented networks’
`Black box’ operating systems vs. dynamic extension and VM technologies
`Closed’ networks vs. application-level services `in’ network devices
• e.g., Cisco’s AONS, Intel’s IXP network processors
Event Processing in EScience – SmartPointer Example
SmartPointer: Dataintensive scientific
collaboration
Dynamic composition of userspecified services.
SOAP
Gateway
Web-enabled
client
IQ
SmartPipe
Remote client
IQ
IQ
EXMD
IQ
SmartPipe
Server
IQ
SmartPipe
Morph Service
IQ
2D
control
SmartPipe
Desktop client
IQ
SmartPipe
Ipaq