Search for dissertations about: "Grid accounting"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 20 swedish dissertations containing the words Grid accounting.
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1. Capacity allocation mechanisms for grid environments
Abstract : During the past decade, Grid computing has gained popularity as a means to build powerful computing infrastructures by aggregating distributed computing capacity. Grid technology allows computing resources that belong to different organizations to be integrated into a single unified system image – a Grid. READ MORE
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2. Managing Service Levels in Grid Computing Systems : Quota Policy and Computational Market Approaches
Abstract : We study techniques to enforce and provision differentiated service levels in Computational Grid systems. The Grid offers simplified provisioning of peak-capacity for applications with computational requirements beyond local machines and clusters, by sharing resources across organizational boundaries. READ MORE
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3. Autonomous cloud resource provisioning : accounting, allocation, and performance control
Abstract : The emergence of large-scale Internet services coupled with the evolution of computing technologies such as distributed systems, parallel computing, utility computing, grid, and virtualization has fueled a movement toward a new resource provisioning paradigm called cloud computing. The main appeal of cloud computing lies in its ability to provide a shared pool of infinitely scalable computing resources for cloud services, which can be quickly provisioned and released on-demand with minimal effort. READ MORE
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4. Metadata Management in Multi-Grids and Multi-Clouds
Abstract : Grid computing and cloud computing are two related paradigms used to access and use vast amounts of computational resources. The resources are often owned and managed by a third party, relieving the users from the costs and burdens of acquiring and managing a considerably large infrastructure themselves. READ MORE
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5. Enabling Technologies for Management of Distributed Computing Infrastructures
Abstract : Computing infrastructures offer remote access to computing power that can be employed, e.g., to solve complex mathematical problems or to host computational services that need to be online and accessible at all times. READ MORE