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Adaptation Strategy

by Benedikt Liegener last modified Apr 25, 2012 15:29
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Definitions

Term:
Adaptation Strategies
Domain: Cross-cutting issues
Engineering and Design
(KM-ED)
Adaptation and Monitoring
(KM-AM)
Quality Definition, Negotiation and Assurance
(KM-QA)
Generic
(domain independent)
D
o
m
a
i
n
:
L
a
y
e
r
s

Business Process Management
(KM-BPM)




Service Composition and Coordination
(KM-SC)




Service Infrastructure
(KM-SI)

An Adaptation Strategy defines a mean to adapt a service infrastructure. This Adaptation Strategy is realized by the adaptation planning phase.



Generic
(domain independent)
Adaptation Strategy is the means through which adaptation is accomplished. Examples of adaptation strategies are re-configuration, re-binding, re-execution, re-planning, etc. [CD-IA-1.1.1][CD-JRA-1.1.5]
Adaptation Strategies define the possible ways to achieve Adaptation Requirements and Objectives given the available Adaptation Mechanisms. [PO-JRA-1.2.1][CD-JRA-1.1.4]

They may be classified according to a set of characteristics, including  the placement (location) of changes, the used methodology, and the way the strategies are specified [CD-JRA-1.2.2].


 

Competencies

 

References

  • [CD-IA-1.1.1] Deliverable CD-IA-1.1.1, Comprehensive overview of the state of the art on service-based systems
  • [PO-JRA-1.2.1] Deliverable PO-JRA-1.2.1, State of the Art Report, Gap Analysis of Knowledge on Principles, Techniques and Methodologies for Monitoring and Adaptation of SBAs.
  • [CD-JRA-1.2.2] Taxonomy of adaptation principles and mechanisms.
  • [CD-JRA-2.2.4] Models and Mechanisms for Coordinated Service Compositions
  • [CD-JRA-1.1.5] "Analysis on how to exploit codified HCI and codified context knowledge for SBA engineering"
  • [CD-JRA-1.1.4] Coordinated design knowledge models for software engineering and
    service-based computing



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