- PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

Description:

New mechanisms, techniques for end-to-end services w/ desirable, predictable, ... Snapshot of our current thoughts. Scenarios of service provision ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:16
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: Rand220
Category:
Tags: snapshot

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title:


1
Design Review
  • Randy H. Katz, Anthony Joseph, Ion Stoica
  • Computer Science Division
  • Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
    Department
  • University of California, Berkeley
  • Berkeley, CA 94720-1776

2
The Sahara Project
  • Service
  • Architecture for
  • Heterogeneous
  • Access,
  • Resources, and
  • Applications

3
Sahara Research Themes
  • New mechanisms, techniques for end-to-end
    services w/ desirable, predictable, enforceable
    properties spanning potentially distrusting
    service providers
  • Tech architecture for service composition
    inter-operation across separate admin domains,
    supporting peering brokering, and diverse
    business, value-exchange, access-control models
  • Functional elements
  • Service discovery
  • Service-level agreements
  • Service composition under constraints
  • Redirection to a service instance
  • Performance measurement infrastructure
  • Constraints based on performance, access control,
    accounting/billing/settlements
  • Service modeling and verification

4
Horizontal Service Model
Applications-enabling Services
Processing/Storage Location Placement
Reachability Topology
5
Connectivity and Processing
6
Goals of the Design Review
  • Originally
  • Present technical architecture for comment/review
  • But,
  • Not ready to do so!
  • Too early in our thinking for comprehensive
    architecture
  • So,
  • Snapshot of our current thoughts
  • Scenarios of service provision
  • Dialog with industry colleagues on essential
    components of architecture and their interactions

7
Research QuestionsService Design
  • For a given community of users and a given set of
    performance, availability, and administrative
    constraints,
  • Service Provisioning Problem How many instances
    of a service are needed?
  • Service Placement Problem Where should these
    services be placed?
  • Adaptive Services How do these deployments
    change with evolution of the user community and
    variations in usage demand?

8
Research QuestionsComposition Over Providers
  • Cooperative service placement
  • Consider placement from perspective of entire
    community of service providers
  • How to achieve best possible placement across
    whole community?
  • How do service providers make known their
    services for possible peering/composition with
    other providers (mechanisms of service
    advertisement/service level agreement)?
  • How are these offered services verified (service
    agreement verification)? Which service provider
    is responsible?

9
Research Questions Spanning Service Providers
  • Brokered service placement
  • Form own service composition by picking
    choosing among service instances discovered from
    underlying service providers
  • How is service quality determined by 3rd-party
    broker (performance verification)?
  • How is service composition correctness determined
    by the 3rd-party broker (protocol verification)?

10
Research Questions
  • Service Identification/Choice Problem
  • Given an application (e.g., content
    distribution), which is the best service (e.g.,
    cache/storage resources, transport/interconnection
    connectivity and bandwidth for
    performance-constrained delivery) for supporting
    it?
  • Service Selection Problem
  • Given provisioning placement of services within
    admin domain, which is best service instance?
  • Considering load, distance/latency between
    clients of the service and where the service is
    placed, subscription/billing relationships,
    loyalty/affinity relationships, preferences, etc.

11
Service Examples
  • Connectivity/Reachability
  • Basic Internet routing between ASs
  • More sophisticated multicast distribution
    formation
  • Performance constrained connectivity/latency and
    bandwidth guarantees (e.g., Clearinghouse/Soft
    QoS)
  • Performance monitoring services (distance/latency
    mapping, load collection/balancing across service
    instances)
  • Content distribution services cache/storage
    resources, distribution/transport resources

12
What is a Service?
  • Content transformation services (format
    translators)
  • Gateway selection under load and performance
    constraints
  • Resource allocation services (e.g., auctions for
    bandwidth, processing, storage)
  • Mobility services (e.g., device ensembles)
  • Who is allowed to invoke a service
    Authentication, Accounting, Access Control
  • Payment for services billing, financial
    clearinghouses
  • Interworking services across administrative
    domains/different technologies

13
Some Starting SAHARA Assumptions
  • Dynamic confederations to better share resources
    deploy access/achieve regional coverage more
    rapidly
  • Scarce resources efficiently allocated using
    dynamic market-driven mechanisms
  • Trusted third partners manage resource
    marketplace in a fair, unbiased, audited and
    verifiable basis
  • Vertical stovepipe replaced by horizontally
    organized multi-providers, open to increased
    competition and more efficient allocation of
    resources
  • Sanity Check?

14
Implications for Architectural Elements
  • Open service/resource allocation model
  • Independent service creation, establishment,
    placement, in overlapping domains 
  • Resources, capabilities, status
    described/exchanged amongst confederates, via
    enhanced capability negotiation
  • Allocation based on economic methods, such as
    congestion pricing, dynamic marketplaces/auctions
  • Trust management among participants, based on
    trusted third party monitors

15
Implications for Architectural Elements
  • Forming dynamic confederations
  • Discovering potential confederates
  • Establishing trust relationships
  • Managing transitive trust relationships levels
    of transparency
  • Not all confederates need be competitors--heteroge
    neous, collocated access networks to better
    support applications

16
Architectural Elements
  • Alternative View Service Brokering
  • Dynamically construct overlays on component
    services provided by underlying service providers
  • E.g., overlay network segments with desirable
    performance attributes
  • E.g., construct end-to-end multicast trees from
    subtrees in different service provider clouds
  • Redirect to alternative service instances
  • E.g., choose instance based on distance, network
    load, server load, trust relationships,
    resilience to network failure,

17
TINA Reference Model
  • Separate
  • apps from exec environ
  • service-specific from control
  • Generic (Common) Objects Service-Specific
    Objects
  • Session duration-based context for processes
    provisioning a service
  • Access session (authen-tication, service
    selection)
  • Service session
  • User service session (user state, resources)
  • Provider service session (service logic)
  • Comm session abstract view of net connections

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
18
TINA Reference Model
  • Business Model
  • Roles/entities their relationships while
    participating in service provisioning
  • E.g., consumer, retailer, broker, 3rd party
    provider, content provider, connectivity provider
  • Information Model
  • Information-bearing entities
  • E.g., user and service profiles
  • Computational Model
  • Computational objects their relationships

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
B u s i n e s s M o d e l
I n f o r m a t i o n M o d e l
C o m p u t a t i o n a l M o d e l
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
19
Composed Services Under Investigation
  • Overlay routing service connectivity and
    reachability (BGP Sharad, Lakshmi, Morley)
  • Multicast service distribution tree formation
    across administrative domains (Mukund)
  • Soft QoS Service performance constrained
    connectivity/latency and bandwidth guarantees
    (Clearinghouse Chen-nee, Lakshmi)
  • Performance monitoring service distance/latency
    mapping, load collection/balancing across service
    instances (Yan)
  • Content distribution services cache/storage
    resources, distribution/transport resources (Yan,
    Morley)

20
Composed Services Under Investigation
  • Infrastructure Services
  • Highly available/fast fall-over services in
    wide-area (Bhaskar)Fall-back path bandwidth
    provisioning (Weidong)
  • Service instance selection, load-balanced
    resource sharing
  • Resource allocation/auctions and class-of-service
    pricing for bandwidth, processing, storage
    (Weidong Matt)
  • Mobility and cooperation across access
    networks/device ensembles (Machi)
  • Interdomain Authentication Access Control
    (Suzuki)
  • Applications
  • Content transformation/format translators
    Universal In-Box (Bhaskar)
  • H.323 Gateway selection under load performance
    constraints (Matt)
  • VoIP and bandwidth congestion pricing (Jimmy)
  • Smart Spaces/PAN?

21
SAHARA Architecture
  • Network Environment
  • Explicitly distinguish between multiple Access
    Networks and Core Networks
  • Gateway Provider (GP)
  • Points of Presence between different kinds of
    networks
  • Path Provider (PP)
  • Autonomous systems (AS) determine service domains
    for purposes of reachability
  • Peering between administrative domains managed
    via BGP
  • Point-to-point (and multipoint) latency,
    availability SLAs within a single administrative
    domain
  • Datacenter Provider (DCP)
  • Distributed computing resources (processing,
    storage) embedded within network topology
  • Load/latency/availability SLAs within single
    datacenter location

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Performance Verification
SLAs
Network Environment
22
SAHARA Architecture
  • Distributed ProcessingService Placement
  • Place objects (operators data) at DCs,
    connected by paths
  • Multiple object and path instances for load
    balancing, availability, scale
  • Brokers
  • Given performance other constraints
  • Path brokering create overlay network among
    processing sites,link by link
  • DC brokering given distribution of clients,
    select processing sites for operators
  • Confederations
  • Visibility of (alternative) paths, DCs among
    associated providers
  • Peer-to-peer reassignment of objects to DCs and
    paths

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
23
SAHARA Architecture
  • Distributed ProcessingService Building
    Services
  • Authorization, Authentication, Accounting
  • Interworking services spanning administrative
    domains
  • Service Selection and Naming Service
  • Choosing a best service
  • Finding nearest service instance
  • Service Redirection Service
  • Load balancing among service instances
  • Selecting the best among services with common
    affinity
  • Mobility support
  • Resource Allocation Service
  • Auction-based allocation
  • Performance Measurement Service
  • Network distance measurements
  • Latency measurements for operator invocation over
    network

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
24
SAHARA Architecture
  • Applications
  • Unified messaging services (Universal In-box)
  • Content xform proxies
  • Latency, availability, scalability
  • Content-distribution services
  • Cache placement replenishment algorithms
  • Adaptive to client community evolution
  • IP Telephony
  • H.323 gateway selection/load balancing
  • Balance between packet (IP) and circuit-switched
    (PSTN) path
  • Device Ensembles/Virtual Devices
  • Inter-network stream synchronization
  • Virtual device proxy placement
  • Virtual Home Environment

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
25
SAHARA and TINA
  • Key Differences
  • Extreme heterogeneity of spanned networks and
    resources
  • Greater awareness and management of underlying
    network topology/administrative scopes and affect
    on services
  • Focus on
  • Cooperative vs. competitive service composition
  • Resource management via placement, allocation,
    redirection to services and resources
  • Borrow good parts of TINA
  • Applications/Distributed Processing/Network
    Environment
  • Business models/Information Model/Computation
    Model
  • Understand why TINA failed
  • Avoid full-blown complexity of TINA

26
Example Content Distribution
  • Application Content Delivery
  • Clients Subscribers, Publishers
  • Services
  • Distribution network
  • Content caches (service instances)
  • Place caches at selected DCs (service placement)
  • Redirect client to best cache instance (service
    redirection)
  • Based on proximity, load, content
  • Service Composition
  • Broker multi-point distribution paths between
    publishers and caches
  • Add/delete cache instances as client community
    grows/shrinks
  • Brokering at content level among competing CDNs

Service
Generic Mgmt Control
Applications
Objects
Sessions
Trans- port
Distributed ProcessingEnvironment
Network Environment
27
SAHARA Architectural Model
28
SAHARA Architectural Model
Service Path Creation
Service Selection Service Placement
Service Location Perf Measurement
29
SAHARA Architectural Model
Load Balancing
Service Selection Service Placement
Service Redirection Perf Measurement
30
SAHARA Architectural Model
Service Brokering
Path Determination
Perf Measurement Verification
31
SAHARA Architectural Model
Service Confederation
Service Discovery SLA Negotiation
Perf Measurement SLA Verification
Authentication Authorization Interworking Mobili
ty Interworking
32
SAHARA Architectural Model
High Availability Services
Service Failure Detection
Service Recovery Path re-composition
33
SAHARA Architectural Model
High Availability Services
Service Location
Path Orthogonality Determination
34
SAHARA Architectural Model
Universal In-Box
Translator Provisioning and Placement
Path Determination
35
SAHARA Architectural Model
Content Distribution
Cache Provisioning and Placement
Distribution Tree Formation
36
SAHARA Architectural Model
Voice over IP
Gateway Provisioning and Placement
Packet-to-CircuitTermination Selection
37
Summary and Status
  • Evolve (mobile) Internet architecture to better
    support multiple service provider model
  • Dynamic environment, location-based implies
    larger numbers of service providers service
    instances
  • Refine and build SAHARA Architecture
  • Specification driven by selected applications and
    underlying wide-area services
  • Composition across confederated vs. independent
    service providers peer-to-peer vs. brokering

38
Discussion
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com