How policy empowers business-driven device management
Existing network management architectures suffer from the inability to define and use business processes to drive the configuration and management of network resources. Business-Driven Device Management is a new paradigm that enables business rules to manage the construction of configuration files a...
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creator | Strassner, J. |
description | Existing network management architectures suffer from the inability to define and use business processes to drive the configuration and management of network resources. Business-Driven Device Management is a new paradigm that enables business rules to manage the construction of configuration files and commands for a device as well as enforce how the configuration of a device is created, verified, approved, and deployed BDDM uses different types of policies to manage the different aspects of providing network services. These policies form a continuum that represents the complete life cycle (from order to creation to tear-down) of network services, bridge the automation gap between the service and element layers, and controls which network services and resources are allocated to which users. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1109/POLICY.2002.1011311 |
format | Conference Proceeding |
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Business-Driven Device Management is a new paradigm that enables business rules to manage the construction of configuration files and commands for a device as well as enforce how the configuration of a device is created, verified, approved, and deployed BDDM uses different types of policies to manage the different aspects of providing network services. These policies form a continuum that represents the complete life cycle (from order to creation to tear-down) of network services, bridge the automation gap between the service and element layers, and controls which network services and resources are allocated to which users.</abstract><pub>IEEE</pub><doi>10.1109/POLICY.2002.1011311</doi><tpages>4</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | IEEE Electronic Library (IEL) Conference Proceedings |
subjects | Automatic control Automation Boolean functions Bridges Data models Data structures Object oriented modeling Process control Resource management Virtual private networks |
title | How policy empowers business-driven device management |
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