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Objective of Meeting
Summary
Outputs
Next Steps
Links


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Customers and Vendors - Planning a Challenge to Deliver QoS for Real-Time Applications in Aggregate Systems

Tuesday October 15th, Cannes, 16:00 - 17:30

Objective of Meeting

The objective of this session is to introduce the Vendor Challenge to the industry and the European Real-Time community and to solicit feedback from the participants on how to make the challenge as effective and engaging as it can be.  

This session will outline the requirements and the scenarios that have been put forward thus far by the "QoS Real-Time Requirements" Project .  This session will solicit feedback and discussion to refine the requirements for the challenge and refine the options for scenarios.  The goal is to issue the challenge in Q2 of 2003.

The challenge will focus around guidelines for integrated QoS that account for Real-Time Requirements with particular attention to:

  • Dependable Timeliness - indicative of real-time application requirements
  • QoS/Real-Time application patterns in various programming enclaves (e.g. procedural, database, parallel, and potentially safety critical)
  • Real-Time metrics for Integrated QoS
  • Aggregate Systems

The expected outcome of this session is:

  • Increased awareness of the challenge.

  • Increased participation - initially in the planning, and ultimately in stepping up to the challenge, particularly from the European arena.

  • Refined requirements for the challenge and a firmer description of the scenario to be used in the challenge itself.

Summary

Sally Long explained the role of Real-Time in the work of the Quality of Service Task Force.  Her slides, in pdf format, are here

Doc Allen presented her view of the requirements for a scenario for a challenge.  Her slides (pdf) are here

  • It should prepresent an aggregated system included at least two enclaves (such as database (parallel) and Procedural (safety critical).
  • Dependable end-to-end timeliness should be required for some of the applications.
  • The scenario should be performance challenging, but achievable.
  • It should involve enterprise integration - there should be a QoS framework
  • Individual applications should be 'do-able'
  • The scenario should involve non-real-time applications
  • A multi-lingual environment is not required, but should not be excluded
  • There should be some dynamic workloads
  • There should be a separation between analytical versus demonstration versus other types of evidence
  • Define level and type of dependability and the measurement approach
  • Need to show different loads on different resources to show that the solution is robust.
  • Solutions need to be robust to the independent evolution of application requirements
  • Remember policy driven Q0S (multi-dimensional)

Dock then presented a potential scenario based on 

Jean Hammond then presented a Navy SLA scenario which had been received from Deborah Goldsmith of Mitre Corporation.  The system is designed to be on-ship, designed to carry regular applications such as VoIP together with time critical systems.  There is a series of differnet interconnects between the ships and the rest of the system.  There are some emerging requirements in terms of delay priorities; the scenario brings together traditional command-and-control systems and the traffic requirements of a small city.

Dock then led a discussion of possibilities for other potential scenarios:

  • Telco - felt to be too complicated.
  • Something like a CNN news-gathering service - because of the need to almost instantaneously reset prioritities, and the need to take feeds from different locations and to use them differently.  Charles Richmond has good contacts in Akamai.
  • Neil Davies had spoken to an organisation which was a potential source of a scenario, but they had not agreed.
  • Dave Lounsbury outlined a publicly available scenario for future combat systems, utilising Command and Control systems and weapons, where the terrain frequently masked the signal and the system had to cope with jamming, and everything changed from moment to moment.
  • Neil Davies suggested ad hoc 802 networking as a scenario
  • Joe Bergmann suggested 'internet in the sky' - ARINC and Boeing.

Slides that Dock wrote during the discussion are here.

Benefits for users from participation

  • better definitions for SLAs
  • benefits of critical mass from cooperation
  • earlier solution from vendors, using their dollars
  • public awareness of the problem, impacting on vendors and the research community

Benefits for vendors from participation

  • better definitions for SLAs
  • public relations benefits from participation
  • better understanding of issues by users
  • opportunity for unusual synergies
  • the potential to sell new solutions, or to new customers

Assets

  • Membership, and contacts
  • OMG partnership

Joe Bergmann explained what he was doing in trying to put together a network of Universities to work in this space, enabling graduate students to gain public exposure before leaving University.  The Open Group would offer free membership provided they could support the travel.  We need to talk to DARPA, and there may be research money available from the 2003 budget in the Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office.

Outputs

Feedback from discussion - above.

Next Steps

By the February meeting the requirements for the scenario should be agreed and a couple of scenarios fleshed out.  The email address for the group is qos_realtime@opengroup.org.

Links

See above.

 


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