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Call for Papers - Future Generation Computer Systems (FGCS)

Special Issue on “Cloud Monitoring Systems”

http://www.elsevier.com/locate/future

Scope

Cloud computing is one of the hottest topics in current Internet systems. It 
brings the illusion of a virtually infinite computing infrastructure/platform
that provides advanced features. Examples include dynamic resource scalability, 
advanced billing mechanisms that allows pay-per-use model on shared 
multi-tenant resources, and simplified developing platforms.

The aforementioned features are supported by the availability of handy 
information used by human operators or decision-making systems (supervised or 
semi-supervised) to enable a highly scalable system. As a result of its 
relevance, the wealth of systems dealing with “cloud monitoring” has been 
gaining weight in existing literature slowly. Note that, systems such as Amazon 
CloudWatch and Nagios were designed to handle this monitoring issue.

While there is an extensive literature in infrastructure or application 
monitoring, a lot more needs to be done, namely: 1) monitoring of virtual 
resources built from the infrastructure of data centres (e.g. I/O access of 
VMs, user-controlled scalable networks, etc.); 2) services provided to 
application developers (e.g. databases, container systems, etc.); and 3) 
applications delivered from the cloud. This is, indeed, one of the most widely 
repeated tasks by every project in the cloud arena. It is known that, every 
cloud application, platform or infrastructure reinvents its own solution. This 
hampers interoperability across clouds (e.g. How scalability
can be controlled for a service that has VMs deployed both in Amazon and 
Flexiscale?), complicates management, leads to sub-optimal solutions (e.g. How 
do PaaS providers configure or scale their platform according to application’s 
load?), and is a waste of valuable time as well as resources.

If these barriers are overcome, cloud technologies will potentially change the 
way users build and run applications while application providers will be 
focusing on their primary tasks so that rebuilding existing monitoring system 
from scratch will be no longer needed. In addition, the increased number of VMs 
and applications in virtualised data centres triggers serious scalability 
concerns with regards to monitoring. This myriad of particular solutions to the 
same problem is resulting less beneficial than expected. Therefore, the needs 
for having a clear picture of the available systems for all levels of the cloud 
and a clear view on how they can
interoperate among themselves (or a unique integral monitoring system for all 
cloud layers) have become urgent issues for industrial practitioners as well as 
research communities.

Topics

This special issue will focus on promoting novel research on cloud monitoring 
systems, especially in levels that have remained unexplored (e.g. federation, 
replication, across cloud integration, etc.) Topics of interest include, but 
are not limited to, the following:

· Monitoring systems for cloud infrastructure/platform applications as compared 
to existing approaches.
· Integration of different monitoring systems in the cloud.
· Scalability of cloud monitoring systems.
· Characterisation of monitoring needs for applications, platforms and 
infrastructures (minimum rates, response time, maximum number of events, etc.)
· Practical comparison of different monitoring systems that aids users to 
select among a series of alternative systems under different conditions.
· Practical use cases of decision-making modules fed with a given monitoring 
system and architecture.
· Monitoring management tools that deal with cloud applications throughout 
their entire lifecycle (e.g. scaling decisions-making modules or application 
governance modules that can be exposed as a service).
· Languages and tools for expressing/automating monitoring needs.
· Mobile application monitoring.
· Virtual network probes (e.g. How to place network monitoring elements in a 
public cloud?)
· Evolution of multi-tenant monitoring as a function of the number of tenants.
· Policy-based monitoring across cloud providers.

Please note that, an Internet available demo or a live video (hosted by the 
authors) is desirable and would positively affect the review outcome.

Important Dates:

Paper submission: 31st March 2012
Acceptance notification: 1st July 2012
Final papers: 1st Aug 2012
Publication: Nov-Dec 2012

Guest Editors:

· Dr. Luis M. Vaquero (http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/luis_vaquerogonzalez/). 
Hewlett-Packard, UK
· Dr. Suksant Sae Lor (http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/suksant_sae-lor/). 
Hewlett-Packard, UK
· Dr. Dev Audsin (http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/dev_audsin/). Hewlett-Packard, UK
· Dr. Stuart Clayman (http://www.ee.ucl.ac.uk/~sclayman/) University College 
London, UK
· Prof. Jose M. Alcaraz-Calero (http://webs.um.es/jmalcaraz/miwiki/doku.php). 
Hewlett-Packard, UK & University of Murcia, Spain
· Prof. Dusit Niyato (http://www.ntu.edu.sg/home/dniyato/). Nanyang 
Technological University, Singapore
· Prof. R. Nadarajan. 
(http://www.psgtech.edu/department/mca/Dr.R.Nadarajan.html). PSG College of 
Technology, India

Submission Format:

Submissions must be written in English. Papers must contain novel ideas and 
must differ significantly in content from previously published papers and 
papers under simultaneous submission. Authors should prepare and submit 
manuscripts according to the Guide for Authors in the following link:

http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/505611/authorinstructions

If you have any questions about paper submission or the special issue, please 
contact one of the Guest Editors.

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Jose M. Alcaraz-Calero
Cloud and Security Lab
Hewlett-Packard Research Laboratories
Stroke Gifford
Bristol BS34 8QZ
UK
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