In this paper, we propose a refinement-based adaptation approach for the architecture of distributed group communication support applications. Unlike most of previous works, our approach reaches implementable, context-aware and dynamically adaptable architectures. To model the context, we manage simultaneously four parameters that influence Qos provided by the application. These parameters are: the available bandwidth, the exchanged data communication priority, the energy level and the available memory for processing. These parameters make it possible to refine the choice between the various architectural configurations when passing from a given abstraction level to the lower level which implements it. Our approach allows the importance degree associated with each parameter to be adapted dynamically. To implement adaptation, we switch between the various configurations of the same level, and we modify the state of the entities of a given configuration when necessary. We adopt the direct and mediated Producer- Consumer architectural styles and graphs for architecture modelling. In order to validate our approach we elaborate a simulation model.
[1]
Gordon S. Blair,et al.
Developing Adaptive Applications: The MOST Experience
,
1999,
Integr. Comput. Aided Eng..
[2]
Florian Schintke,et al.
Peer-to-Peer Computing
,
2010,
Euro-Par.
[3]
David S. Rosenblum,et al.
Design and evaluation of a wide-area event notification service
,
2001,
TOCS.
[4]
Anne-Marie Kermarrec,et al.
The many faces of publish/subscribe
,
2003,
CSUR.
[5]
Jon M. Peha,et al.
Streaming video over the Internet: approaches and directions
,
2001,
IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. Video Technol..
[6]
Fangzhe Chang,et al.
Automatic configuration and run-time adaptation of distributed applications
,
2000,
Proceedings the Ninth International Symposium on High-Performance Distributed Computing.
[7]
Michel Diaz,et al.
FPTP: the XQoS aware and fully programmable transport protocol
,
2003,
The 11th IEEE International Conference on Networks, 2003. ICON2003..
[8]
Andreas Nürnberger,et al.
CARSA - An Architecture for the Development of Context Adaptive Retrieval Systems
,
2005,
Adaptive Multimedia Retrieval.
[9]
David Garlan,et al.
A formal basis for architectural connection
,
1997,
TSEM.