Market-Oriented Grid and Utility Computing ( Wiley Series on Parallel and Distributed Computing )

Publication series :Wiley Series on Parallel and Distributed Computing

Author: Rajkumar Buyya  

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc‎

Publication year: 2009

E-ISBN: 9780470455425

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780470287682

Subject: TP302.1 overall design, system design

Language: ENG

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Description

The first single-source reference covering the state of the art in grid and utility computing economy research

This book presents the first integrated, single-source reference on market-oriented grid and utility computing. Divided into four main parts—and with contributions from a panel of experts in the field—it systematically and carefully explores:

  • Foundations—presents the fundamental concepts of market-oriented computing and the issues and challenges in allocating resources in a decentralized computing environment.

  • Business models—covers business models for service providers and brokers supporting different types of distributed applications, as well as business rules-based models for managing virtual organizations and accounting operations and services in grid computing environments.

  • Policies and agreements—introduces policies, agreements, and specifications for the negotiation and establishment of contracts between providers and consumers. It also covers different approaches for resource allocation based on service-level agreements (SLAs) and management of risks associated with SLA violations.

  • Resource allocation and scheduling mechanisms—covers economic models, such as commodity models, reciprocation, auctions, and game theory, and middleware technologies, such as Nimrod/G and Gridbus, for market-oriented grid computing and utility-oriented resource allocation.

This book expertly captures the state of the art in the field while also identifying potential research directions and technologies that will facilitate the creation of global commercial grid and utility computing systems. It is an indispensable reference for systems architects, practitioners, developers, new researchers, and graduate students.

Chapter

CONTENTS

pp.:  1 – 7

CONTRIBUTORS

pp.:  7 – 11

PREFACE

pp.:  11 – 17

ACRONYMS

pp.:  17 – 21

PART I FOUNDATIONS

pp.:  21 – 27

PART II BUSINESS MODELS

pp.:  27 – 147

PART III POLICIES AND AGREEMENTS

pp.:  147 – 239

PART IV RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND SCHEDULING MECHANISMS

pp.:  239 – 381

INDEX

pp.:  381 – 649

LastPages

pp.:  649 – 673

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