Article in Proceedings INPROC-2012-18

BibliographyBinz, Tobias; Fehling, Christoph; Leymann, Frank; Nowak, Alexander; Schumm, David: Formalizing the Cloud through Enterprise Topology Graphs.
In: Proceedings of 2012 IEEE International Conference on Cloud Computing.
University of Stuttgart, Faculty of Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, and Information Technology.
pp. 742-749, english.
IEEE Computer Society Conference Publishing Services, June 2012.
DOI: 10.1109/CLOUD.2012.143.
Article in Proceedings (Conference Paper).
CR-SchemaK.6 (Management of Computing and Information Systems)
D.2.12 (Software Engineering Interoperability)
Keywordsenterprise topology; enterprise topology graph; EAM; topology abstraction; segmentation; aggregation
Abstract

Enterprises often have no integrated and comprehensive view of their enterprise topology describing their entire IT infrastructure, software, on-premise and off-premise services, processes, and their interrelations. Especially due to acquisitions, mergers, reorganizations, and outsourcing there is no clear ‘big picture’ of the enterprise topology. Through this lack, management of applications becomes harder and duplication of components and information systems increases. Furthermore, the lack of insight makes changes in the enterprise topology like consolidation, migration, or outsourcing more complex and error prone which leads to high operational cost. In this paper we propose Enterprise Topology Graphs (ETG) as formal model to describe an enterprise topology. Based on established graph theory ETG bring formalization and provability to the cloud. They enable the application of proven graph algorithms to solve enterprise topology research problems in general and cloud research problems in particular. For example, we present a search algorithm which locates segments in large and possibly distributed enterprise topologies using structural queries. To illustrate the power of the ETG approach we show how it can be applied for IT consolidation to reduce operational costs, increase flexibility by simplifying changes in the enterprise topology, and improve the environmental impact of the enterprise IT.

ContactTobias Binz
Department(s)University of Stuttgart, Institute of Architecture of Application Systems
Project(s)CloudCycle
Migrate
SimTech
Entry dateMay 16, 2012
   Publ. Computer Science