Distributed network management

As organizations are increasingly dependent on distributed computing systems, they become more exposed to the inherent risks of such complex systems. Performance inefficiency, resource allocations, security compromises and accounting are some of the problems associated with the operations of these s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mak, Yoke Lai.
Other Authors: Ang, Yew Hock
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/19825
Description
Summary:As organizations are increasingly dependent on distributed computing systems, they become more exposed to the inherent risks of such complex systems. Performance inefficiency, resource allocations, security compromises and accounting are some of the problems associated with the operations of these systems. Interest in distributed network management has been stimulated by such growing system complexity. Traditional centralized management approach relies on a single network management system to collect, aggregate and process all data. The shortfalls of using such an approach in managing complex distributed networks are: i) a great amount of network bandwidth will have to be devoted for management traffic which need to travel many network segments before reaching the centralized manager, ii) the processing power requirement of the centralized manager increases as the network size grows, making it an unlikely scaleable solution in network management.