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College of Engineering and Management, Punnapra: Department of Information Technology

The document is a seminar abstract about autonomic computing. Autonomic computing refers to self-managing computer systems that can adapt to changes automatically. Started by IBM in 2001, the goal is to develop systems that can manage themselves using high-level policies, constantly checking their status and adapting to changing conditions. An autonomic computing framework consists of autonomic components that interact using sensors, effectors, knowledge, and planners to self-monitor and self-adjust according to policies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views3 pages

College of Engineering and Management, Punnapra: Department of Information Technology

The document is a seminar abstract about autonomic computing. Autonomic computing refers to self-managing computer systems that can adapt to changes automatically. Started by IBM in 2001, the goal is to develop systems that can manage themselves using high-level policies, constantly checking their status and adapting to changing conditions. An autonomic computing framework consists of autonomic components that interact using sensors, effectors, knowledge, and planners to self-monitor and self-adjust according to policies.

Uploaded by

Raghuldev VJ
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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College of Engineering and Management, Punnapra Department of Information Technology

Seminar Abstract on

AUTONOMIC COMPUTING

Submitted By
NAME: VISHNU K ROLL NO: 32 BATCH: IT 2008-2012

AUTONOMIC COMPUTING
Autonomic Computing refers to the self-managing characteristics of distributed computing resources, adapting to unpredictable changes whilst hiding intrinsic complexity to operators and users. Started by IBM in 2001, this initiative's ultimate aim is to develop computer systems capable of self-management, to overcome the rapidly growing complexity of computing systems management, and to reduce the barrier that complexity poses to further growth. An autonomic system makes decisions on its own, using high-level policies; it will constantly check and optimize its status and automatically adapt itself to changing conditions. As widely reported in literature, an autonomic computing framework might be seen composed by Autonomic Components (AC) interacting with each other. An AC can be modeled in terms of two main control loops (local and global) with sensors (for self-monitoring), effectors (for selfadjustment), knowledge and planner/adapter for exploiting policies based on self- and environment awareness. Driven by such vision, a variety of architectural frameworks based on selfregulating autonomic components has been recently proposed. A very similar trend has recently characterized significant research work in the area of multi-agent systems. However, most of these approaches are typically conceived with centralized or cluster-based server architectures in mind and mostly address the need of reducing management costs rather than the need of enabling complex software systems or providing innovative services. IT professionals choose to delegate to the technology according to policies. Adaptable policyrather than hard-coded procedure determines the types of decisions and actions that autonomic capabilities perform.

SEMINAR GUIDE: EBEY S RAJ

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