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Interfering effects of adaption: Implications on self-adapting systems architecture

Abstract

When people are moving around using handheld networked devices, the environment for theprovided services vary influencing service quality properties and user needs. In order to maintain usability and usefulness for mobile users, dynamic service adaptation is needed. Several forms of adaptation may be applied. For example, the application structure may adapt from thin client to self-reliant client, or network handover may be performed. The selection of an adaptation type is however far from obvious. Adaptation usually has impact on system resources or service quality. Also, one adaptation may require other adaptations that again have impact on resources andquality. This paper illustrates the complexity of selecting an adequate adaptation form. We argue that adaptation selection requires advanced reasoning and identify implications on the architecture of self-adapting systems.

Category

Academic chapter/article/Conference paper

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Digital / Software Engineering, Safety and Security

Year

2006

Publisher

Springer

Book

Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems, Proceedings : DAIS 2006

Issue

4025

ISBN

9783540351269

Page(s)

64 - 69

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