Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2408.15013

Topic
Computer Science - Distributed, Pa... Computer Science - Emerging Techno... Computer Science - Networking and ...
Author
Alqahtani, Awatif Solaiman, Ellis Ranjan, Rajiv
Category

Computer Science

Year

2024

listing date

9/4/2024

Keywords
qos science computer iot
Metrics

Abstract

Since SLAs specify the contractual terms that are formally used between consumers and providers, there is a need to aggregate QoS requirements from the perspectives of Clouds, networks, and devices to deliver the promised IoT functionalities.

Therefore, the main objective of this chapter is to provide a conceptual model of SLA for the IoT as well as rich vocabularies to describe the QoS and domain-specific configuration parameters of the IoT on an end-to-end basis.

We first propose a conceptual model that identifies the main concepts that play a role in specifying end-to-end SLAs.

Then, we identify some of the most common QoS metrics and configuration parameters related to each concept.

We evaluated the proposed conceptual model using a goal-oriented approach, and the participants in the study reported a high level of satisfaction regarding the proposed conceptual model and its ability to capture main concepts in a general way.

Alqahtani, Awatif,Solaiman, Ellis,Ranjan, Rajiv, 2024, SLA Conceptual Model for IoT Applications

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Comparison between Dual-Energy CT and Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping in Assessing Brain Iron Deposition in Parkinson Disease
nigra substantia healthy depositions p < 05 nucleus brain susceptibility ct bilateral dual-energy iron quantitative mapping values magnetic globus pallidus
Integration of human papillomavirus associated anal cancer screening into HIV care and treatment program in Pakistan: perceptions of policymakers, managers, and care providers
hpv hiv msm transgender women anal cancer screening integration pakistan system managers pakistan informants anal screening cancer lack healthcare hiv