Journal of Software Engineering and Applications

Volume 5, Issue 11 (November 2012)

ISSN Print: 1945-3116   ISSN Online: 1945-3124

Google-based Impact Factor: 2  Citations  

Mapping High-Level Application Requirements onto Low-Level Cloud Resources

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 996KB)  PP. 894-902  
DOI: 10.4236/jsea.2012.531104    4,670 Downloads   7,664 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Cloud computing has created a paradigm shift that affects the way in which business applications are developed. Many business organizations use cloud infrastructures as platforms on which to deploy business applications. Increasing numbers of vendors are supplying the cloud marketplace with a wide range of cloud products. Different vendors offer cloud products in different formats. The cost structures for consuming cloud products can be complex. Finding a suitable set of cloud products that meets an application’s requirements and budget can be a challenging task. In this paper, an ontology-based resource mapping mechanism is proposed. Domain-specific ontologies are used to specify high-level application’s requirements. These are then translated into high-level infrastructure ontologies which then can be mapped onto low-level descriptions of cloud resources. Cost ontologies are proposed for cloud resources. An exemplar media transcoding and delivery service is studied in order to illustrate how high-level requirements can be modeled and mapped onto cloud resources within a budget constraint. The proposed ontologies provide an application-centric mechanism for specifying cloud requirements which can then be used for searching for suitable resources in a multi-provider cloud environment.

Share and Cite:

Sun, Y. , Harmer, T. and Stewart, A. (2012) Mapping High-Level Application Requirements onto Low-Level Cloud Resources. Journal of Software Engineering and Applications, 5, 894-902. doi: 10.4236/jsea.2012.531104.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.