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Negotiation towards service level agreements: a life cycle based approach

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conference contribution
posted on 2011-12-15, 16:17 authored by Sajid Ibrahim Hashmi, Rafiqul Haque, Eric Schmieders, Ita RichardsonIta Richardson
Service Based Systems (SBSs) are composed of loosely coupled services. Different stakeholders in these systems, e.g. service providers, service consumers, and business decision makers, have different types of concerns which may be dissimilar or inconsistent. Service level agreements (SLAs) play a major role in ensuring the quality of SBSs. They stipulate the availability, reliability, and quality levels required for an effective interaction between service providers and consumers. It has been noticed that because of having conflicting priorities and concerns, conflicts arise between service providers and service consumers while negotiating over the functionality of potential services. Since these stakeholders are involved with different phases the life cycle, it is really important to take into consideration these life cycle phases for proposing any kind of SLA negotiation methodology. In this research, we propose a stakeholder negotiation strategy for Service Level Agreements, which is based on prioritizing stakeholder concerns based on their frequency at each phase of the SBS development life cycle. We make use of a Collaxa BPEL orchestration server loan service example to demonstrate the applicability of the proposed approach. In addition, we simulate the negotiation priority values to predict their potential impact on the cost of the SLA negotiation.

Funding

Study on Aerodynamic Characteristics Control of Slender Body Using Active Flow Control Technique

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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History

Publication

7th IEEE World Congress on Services (Services 2011);2011

Publisher

IEEE Computer Society

Note

non-peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

ERC, SFI, HEA

Rights

“© 2011 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.

Language

English

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