The vision of autonomic computing
JO Kephart, DM Chess - Computer, 2003 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
JO Kephart, DM Chess
Computer, 2003•ieeexplore.ieee.orgA 2001 IBM manifesto observed that a looming software complexity crisis-caused by
applications and environments that number into the tens of millions of lines of code-
threatened to halt progress in computing. The manifesto noted the almost impossible
difficulty of managing current and planned computing systems, which require integrating
several heterogeneous environments into corporate-wide computing systems that extend
into the Internet. Autonomic computing, perhaps the most attractive approach to solving this …
applications and environments that number into the tens of millions of lines of code-
threatened to halt progress in computing. The manifesto noted the almost impossible
difficulty of managing current and planned computing systems, which require integrating
several heterogeneous environments into corporate-wide computing systems that extend
into the Internet. Autonomic computing, perhaps the most attractive approach to solving this …
A 2001 IBM manifesto observed that a looming software complexity crisis -caused by applications and environments that number into the tens of millions of lines of code - threatened to halt progress in computing. The manifesto noted the almost impossible difficulty of managing current and planned computing systems, which require integrating several heterogeneous environments into corporate-wide computing systems that extend into the Internet. Autonomic computing, perhaps the most attractive approach to solving this problem, creates systems that can manage themselves when given high-level objectives from administrators. Systems manage themselves according to an administrator's goals. New components integrate as effortlessly as a new cell establishes itself in the human body. These ideas are not science fiction, but elements of the grand challenge to create self-managing computing systems.
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