Lean computing for the cloud / (Record no. 42612)

000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 13465nam a2200925 i 4500
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
control field 7461001
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field IEEE
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20191218152127.0
006 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--ADDITIONAL MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS
fixed length control field m o d
007 - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION FIXED FIELD--GENERAL INFORMATION
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008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 160520s2016 njua ob 001 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781119232353
Qualifying information electronic
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 1119231876
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
Canceled/invalid ISBN 9781119231875
Qualifying information print
024 7# - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
Standard number or code 10.1002/9781119232353
Source of number or code doi
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
System control number (CaBNVSL)mat07461001
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
System control number (IDAMS)0b00006485135787
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Original cataloging agency CaBNVSL
Language of cataloging eng
Description conventions rda
Transcribing agency CaBNVSL
Modifying agency CaBNVSL
050 #4 - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CALL NUMBER
Classification number QA76.585
Item number .B384 2016eb
082 04 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 004.67/82
Edition number 23
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Bauer, Eric,
Relator code aut
Relator term author.
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Lean computing for the cloud /
Statement of responsibility, etc. Eric Bauer.
264 #1 - PRODUCTION, PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, MANUFACTURE, AND COPYRIGHT NOTICE
Place of production, publication, distribution, manufacture Piscataway, New Jersey :
Name of producer, publisher, distributor, manufacturer IEEE Press, 2016.
264 #2 - PRODUCTION, PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, MANUFACTURE, AND COPYRIGHT NOTICE
Place of production, publication, distribution, manufacture Hoboken, New Jersey :
Name of producer, publisher, distributor, manufacturer John Wiley & Sons,
Date of production, publication, distribution, manufacture, or copyright notice 2016.
264 #2 - PRODUCTION, PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, MANUFACTURE, AND COPYRIGHT NOTICE
Place of production, publication, distribution, manufacture [Piscataqay, New Jersey] :
Name of producer, publisher, distributor, manufacturer IEEE Xplore,
Date of production, publication, distribution, manufacture, or copyright notice [2016]
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 1 PDF (xvii, 215 pages) :
Other physical details illustrations.
336 ## - CONTENT TYPE
Content type term text
Source rdacontent
337 ## - MEDIA TYPE
Media type term electronic
Source isbdmedia
338 ## - CARRIER TYPE
Carrier type term online resource
Source rdacarrier
505 0# - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note Introduction xi -- Acknowledgments xv -- Abbreviations xvii -- 1. Basics 1 -- 1.1 Cloud Computing Fundamentals 1 -- 1.2 Roles in Cloud Computing 6 -- 1.3 Applications 9 -- 1.3.1 Application Service Quality 11 -- 1.4 Demand, Supply, Capacity, and Fungibility 13 -- 1.5 Demand Variability 16 -- 1.6 Chapter Review 18 -- 2. Rethinking Capacity Management 19 -- 2.1 Capacity Management 19 -- 2.2 Demand Management 21 -- 2.3 Performance Management 21 -- 2.4 Canonical Capacity Management 23 -- 2.4.1 Traditional Capacity Management 24 -- 2.4.2 ITIL Capacity Management 27 -- 2.4.3 eTOM Capacity Management 28 -- 2.4.4 Discussion 30 -- 2.5 Three Cloud Capacity Management Problems 30 -- 2.5.1 Physical Resource Capacity Management 31 -- 2.5.2 Virtual Resource Capacity Management 32 -- 2.5.3 Application Capacity Management 33 -- 2.6 Cloud Capacity Management as a Value Chain 36 -- 2.7 Chapter Review 39 -- 3. Lean Thinking on Cloud Capacity Management 41 -- 3.1 Lean Thinking Overview 41 -- 3.2 Goal 42 -- 3.3 Seeing Waste (Nonvalue-Adding Activities) 43 -- 3.3.1 Reserve Capacity 45 -- 3.3.2 Excess Application Capacity 46 -- 3.3.3 Excess Online Infrastructure Capacity 46 -- 3.3.4 Excess Physical Infrastructure Capacity 46 -- 3.3.5 Inadequate Capacity 47 -- 3.3.6 Infrastructure Overhead 48 -- 3.3.7 Capacity Management Overhead 48 -- 3.3.8 Resource Overhead 49 -- 3.3.9 Power Management Overhead 50 -- 3.3.10 Workload Migration 50 -- 3.3.11 Complexity Overhead 51 -- 3.3.12 Resource Allocation Failure 51 -- 3.3.13 Leaking and Lost Resources 53 -- 3.3.14 Waste Heat 53 -- 3.3.15 Carbon Footprint 54 -- 3.4 Key Principles 54 -- 3.4.1 Move toward Flow 55 -- 3.4.2 Pull versus Push 55 -- 3.4.3 Level the Workload 55 -- 3.4.4 Stop and Fix Problems 55 -- 3.4.5 Master Practices 56 -- 3.4.6 Visual Management 57 -- 3.4.7 Use Well-Tested Technology 57 -- 3.4.8 Take a Long-Term Perspective 58 -- 3.4.9 Grow, Learn, and Teach Others 58 -- 3.4.10 Develop Exceptional People 58 -- 3.4.11 Partners Help Each Other Improve 58.
505 8# - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note 3.4.12 Go See 59 -- 3.4.13 Implement Rapidly 59 -- 3.4.14 Become a Learning Organization 59 -- 3.5 Pillar: Respect 59 -- 3.6 Pillar: Continuous Improvement 61 -- 3.7 Foundation 62 -- 3.8 Cadence 62 -- 3.9 Lean Capacity Management Philosophy 63 -- 3.10 Chapter Review 64 -- 4. Lean Cloud Capacity Management Strategy 67 -- 4.1 Lean Application Service Provider Strategy 68 -- 4.1.1 User Workload Placement 71 -- 4.1.2 Application Performance Management 73 -- 4.2 Lean Infrastructure Service Provider Strategies 73 -- 4.2.1 Physical Resource Capacity Management 76 -- 4.3 Full Stream Optimization 77 -- 4.4 Chapter Review 79 -- 5. Electric Power Generation as Cloud Infrastructure Analog 81 -- 5.1 Power Generation as a Cloud Infrastructure Analog 81 -- 5.2 Business Context 83 -- 5.3 Business Structure 86 -- 5.4 Technical Similarities 88 -- 5.5 Impedance and Fungibility 91 -- 5.6 Capacity Ratings 94 -- 5.7 Bottled Capacity 95 -- 5.8 Location of Production Considerations 95 -- 5.9 Demand Management 97 -- 5.10 Demand and Reserves 98 -- 5.11 Service Curtailment 99 -- 5.12 Balance and Grid Operations 100 -- 5.13 Chapter Review 103 -- 6. Application Capacity Management as an Inventory Management Problem 105 -- 6.1 The Application Capacity Management Service Delivery Chain 105 -- 6.2 Traditional Application Service Production Chain 107 -- 6.3 Elasticity and Demand-Driven Capacity Management 108 -- 6.4 Application Service as Retail Analog 110 -- 6.4.1 Locational Consideration 112 -- 6.4.2 Inventory and Capacity 112 -- 6.4.3 Service Level 113 -- 6.4.4 Inventory Carrying Costs 114 -- 6.4.5 Inventory Decision, Planning, and Ordering 115 -- 6.4.6 Agility 118 -- 6.4.7 Changing Consumption Patterns 118 -- 6.5 Chapter Review 118 -- 7. Lean Demand Management 119 -- 7.1 Infrastructure Demand Management Techniques 120 -- 7.1.1 Resource Scheduling 121 -- 7.1.2 Resource Curtailment 121 -- 7.1.3 Mandatory Demand Shaping 122 -- 7.1.4 Voluntary Demand Shaping 123 -- 7.1.5 Scheduling Maintenance Actions 123.
505 8# - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note 7.1.6 Resource Pricing 123 -- 7.2 Application Demand Management Techniques 124 -- 7.2.1 Queues and Buffers 124 -- 7.2.2 Load Balancers 124 -- 7.2.3 Overload Controls 125 -- 7.2.4 Explicit Demand Management Actions 125 -- 7.2.5 Scheduling Maintenance Actions 125 -- 7.2.6 User Pricing Strategies 126 -- 7.3 Full Stream Analysis Methodology 126 -- 7.3.1 Analyze Applications' Natural Demand Patterns 127 -- 7.3.2 Analyze Applications' Tolerances 128 -- 7.3.3 Create Attractive Infrastructure Pricing Models 129 -- 7.3.4 Deploy Optimal Infrastructure Demand Management Models 130 -- 7.4 Chapter Review 131 -- 8. Lean Reserves 133 -- 8.1 What Is Reserve Capacity? 133 -- 8.2 Uses of Reserve Capacity 135 -- 8.2.1 Random Demand Peaks 135 -- 8.2.2 Component or Resource Failure 136 -- 8.2.3 Infrastructure Element Failure 136 -- 8.2.4 Infrastructure Resource Curtailment or Demand Management Action 137 -- 8.2.5 Demand Exceeding Forecast 137 -- 8.2.6 Lead Time Demand 137 -- 8.2.7 Catastrophic Failures and Force Majeure Events 139 -- 8.3 Reserve Capacity as a Feature 139 -- 8.4 Types of Reserve Capacity 140 -- 8.4.1 Automatic Infrastructure Power Management Controls 140 -- 8.4.2 Utilize Application Reserve Capacity 141 -- 8.4.3 Place/Migrate Demand into Underutilized Capacity 141 -- 8.4.4 Grow Online Capacity 141 -- 8.4.5 Service Curtailment/Degradation 141 -- 8.4.6 Mandatory Demand Shaping 141 -- 8.4.7 Voluntary Demand Shaping 142 -- 8.4.8 Emergency Reserves 142 -- 8.5 Limits of Reserve Capacity 144 -- 8.6 Ideal Reserve 144 -- 8.6.1 Normal (Co-located) Reserve 144 -- 8.6.2 Emergency (Geographically Distributed) Reserve 146 -- 8.7 Chapter Review 147 -- 9. Lean Infrastructure Commitment 149 -- 9.1 Unit Commitment and Infrastructure Commitment 150 -- 9.2 Framing the Unit Commitment Problem 151 -- 9.3 Framing the Infrastructure Commitment Problem 153 -- 9.4 Understanding Element Startup Time 155 -- 9.5 Understanding Element Shutdown Time 157 -- 9.6 Pulling It All Together 160 -- 9.7 Chapter Review 166.
505 8# - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note 10. Lean Cloud Capacity Management Performance Indicators 167 -- 10.1 Perfect Capacity Metrics 168 -- 10.2 Capacity Management Metrics 172 -- 10.3 Infrastructure Commitment Metrics 173 -- 10.4 Waste Metrics 174 -- 10.4.1 Reserve Capacity Waste Metrics 174 -- 10.4.2 Excess Application Capacity Metrics 175 -- 10.4.3 Excess Online Infrastructure Capacity Metrics 175 -- 10.4.4 Excess Physical Infrastructure Capacity Metrics 175 -- 10.4.5 Inadequate Capacity Metrics 175 -- 10.4.6 Infrastructure Overhead Waste Metrics 176 -- 10.4.7 Capacity Management Overhead Waste Metrics 176 -- 10.4.8 Resource Overhead Waste Metrics 176 -- 10.4.9 Power Management Overhead Waste Metrics 177 -- 10.4.10 Workload Migration Metrics 177 -- 10.4.11 Complexity Overhead Metrics 178 -- 10.4.12 Resource Allocation Failure Metrics 178 -- 10.4.13 Leaking and Lost Resources 179 -- 10.4.14 Waste Heat Metrics 179 -- 10.4.15 Carbon Footprint Metrics 180 -- 10.5 Key Principle Indicators 180 -- 10.6 Cost of Poor Quality 181 -- 10.7 Metrics and Service Boundaries 182 -- 10.8 Measurements and Maturity 183 -- 10.9 Chapter Review 185 -- 11. Summary 187 -- 11.1 Cloud Computing as a Service Delivery Chain 187 -- 11.2 Lean Cloud Computing 190 -- 11.3 Reimagining Cloud Capacity 192 -- 11.4 Lean Demand Management 195 -- 11.5 Lean Reserves 197 -- 11.6 Lean Infrastructure Service Provider Considerations 198 -- 11.7 Lean Application Service Provider Considerations 198 -- 11.8 Lean Infrastructure Commitment 199 -- 11.9 Visualizing Perfect Capacity 201 -- 11.10 Lean Cloud Computing Metrics 203 -- 11.11 Concluding Remarks 204 -- References 207 -- About the Author 211 -- Index 213.
506 1# - RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS NOTE
Terms governing access Restricted to subscribers or individual electronic text purchasers.
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc. Applies lean manufacturing principles across the cloud service delivery chain to enable application and infrastructure service providers to sustainably achieve the shortest lead time, best quality, and value This book focuses on lean in the context of cloud computing capacity management of applications and the physical and virtual cloud resources that support them. Lean Computing for the Cloud considers business, architectural and operational aspects of efficiently delivering valuable services to end users via cloud-based applications hosted on shared cloud infrastructure. The work also focuses on overall optimization of the service delivery chain to enable both application service and infrastructure service providers to adopt leaner, demand driven operations to serve end users more efficiently. The book's early chapters analyze how capacity management morphs with cloud computing into interlocked physical infrastructure capacity management, virtual resource capacity management, and application capacity management problems. The middle chapters frame cloud capacity management as a lean thinking problem, lay out strategies for applying lean thinking best practices across the cloud service delivery chain, and apply key lean insights from other industries. Later chapters discuss lean reserve capacity, lean demand management, optimal power management, and quantitative performance metrics of lean capacity management, which can be used to methodically drive continuous improvement of lean cloud computing deployments. The final chapter summarizes the book's insights on lean strategies to minimize waste across the cloud computing service delivery chain. . Applies lean thinking across the cloud service delivery chain to recognize and minimize waste. Leverages lessons learned from electric power industry operations to operations of cloud infrastructure. Applies insights from just-in-time inventory management to operation of cloud based applications. Explains how traditional, Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) and Enhanced Telecom Operation Map (eTOM) capacity management evolves to lean computing for the cloud This book is geared toward professionals with business, operational, architectural, development, and quality backgrounds in the information and communication technology industry. Eric Bauer is Reliability Engineering Manager in the IP Platforms Group of Alcatel-Lucent. Before focusing on reliability engineering, Mr. Bauer spent two decades designing and developing embedded firmware, networked operating systems, internet platforms, and optical transmission systems. He has been awarded more than a dozen US patents, and has authored several books such as Service Quality of Cloud-Based Applications, Reliability and Availability of Cloud Computing, and Design for Reliability: Information and Computer-Based Systems, all of which were published by Wiley-IEEE Press. Mr. Bauer earned his BS in Electrical Engineering from Cornell University and MS in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University.
530 ## - ADDITIONAL PHYSICAL FORM AVAILABLE NOTE
Additional physical form available note Also available in print.
538 ## - SYSTEM DETAILS NOTE
System details note Mode of access: World Wide Web
588 ## - SOURCE OF DESCRIPTION NOTE
Source of description note Description based on PDF viewed 05/20/2016.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name entry element Cloud computing.
655 #0 - INDEX TERM--GENRE/FORM
Genre/form data or focus term Electronic books.
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-- Aggregates
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-- Application software
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-- Automation
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-- Capacity planning
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-- Cloud computing
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-- Complexity theory
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-- Computational modeling
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-- Continuous improvement
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-- Economics
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-- Fuels
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-- Generators
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-- Hardware
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-- IEC Standards
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-- ISO Standards
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-- Industries
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-- Insurance
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-- Inventory management
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-- Maintenance engineering
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-- Monitoring
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-- NIST
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-- Organizations
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-- Planning
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-- Power generation
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-- Power systems
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-- Pricing
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-- Production
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-- Real-time systems
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-- Resource management
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-- Scheduling
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-- Sections
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-- Surges
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-- Time measurement
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-- Virtualization
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-- Visualization
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-- Waste heat
710 2# - ADDED ENTRY--CORPORATE NAME
Corporate name or jurisdiction name as entry element IEEE Xplore (Online Service),
Relator term distributor.
710 2# - ADDED ENTRY--CORPORATE NAME
Corporate name or jurisdiction name as entry element Wiley,
Relator term publisher.
776 08 - ADDITIONAL PHYSICAL FORM ENTRY
Relationship information Print version:
International Standard Book Number 9781119231875
856 42 - ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS
Materials specified Abstract with links to resource
Uniform Resource Identifier https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/bkabstractplus.jsp?bkn=7461001

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