Engineering performance using control theory
Joseph L. Hellerstein, Yixin Diao, et al.
CMG 2007
Configuration is the process whereby components are assembled or adjusted to produce a functional system that operates at a specified level of performance. Today, the complexity of configuration is a major impediment to deploying and managing computer systems. We describe an approach to quantifying configuration complexity, with the ultimate goal of producing a configuration complexity benchmark. Our belief is that such a benchmark can drive progress towards self-configuring systems. Unlike traditional workload-based performance benchmarks, our approach is process-based. It generates metrics that reflect the level of human involvement in the configuration process, quantified by interaction time and probability of successful configuration. It computes the metrics using a model of a standardized human operator, calibrated in advance by a user study that measures operator behavior on a set of parameterized canonical configuration actions. The model captures the human component of configuration complexity at low cost and provides representativeness and reproducibility.
Joseph L. Hellerstein, Yixin Diao, et al.
CMG 2007
Sheng Ma, Joseph L. Hellerstein
ICDM 2001
Yixin Diao, Joseph L. Hellerstein, et al.
ACC 2004
Fan Zhang, Joseph L. Hellerstein
MASCOTS 2000