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Testing as a Service with HammerCloud

HammerCloud was designed and born under the needs of the grid community to test the resources and automate operations from a user perspective. The recent developments in the IT space propose a shift to the software defined data centres, in which every layer of the infrastructure can be offered as a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Medrano Llamas, Ramón, Barrand, Quentin, Elmsheuser, Johannes, Legger, Federica, Sciacca, Gianfranco, Sciabà, Andrea, van der Ster, Daniel
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/513/6/062031
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1622185
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author Medrano Llamas, Ramón
Barrand, Quentin
Elmsheuser, Johannes
Legger, Federica
Sciacca, Gianfranco
Sciabà, Andrea
van der Ster, Daniel
author_facet Medrano Llamas, Ramón
Barrand, Quentin
Elmsheuser, Johannes
Legger, Federica
Sciacca, Gianfranco
Sciabà, Andrea
van der Ster, Daniel
author_sort Medrano Llamas, Ramón
collection CERN
description HammerCloud was designed and born under the needs of the grid community to test the resources and automate operations from a user perspective. The recent developments in the IT space propose a shift to the software defined data centres, in which every layer of the infrastructure can be offered as a service. Testing and monitoring is an integral part of the development, validation and operations of big systems, like the grid. This area is not escaping the paradigm shift and we are starting to perceive as natural the Testing as a Service (TaaS) offerings, which allow testing any infrastructure service, such as the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platforms being deployed in many grid sites, both from the functional and stressing perspectives. This work will review the recent developments in HammerCloud and its evolution to a TaaS conception, in particular its deployment on the Agile Infrastructure platform at CERN and the testing of many IaaS providers across Europe in the context of experiment requirements. The first section will review the architectural changes that a service running in the cloud needs, such an orchestration service or new storage requirements in order to provide functional and stress testing. The second section will review the first tests of infrastructure providers on the perspective of the challenges discovered from the architectural point of view. Finally, the third section will evaluate future requirements of scalability and features to increase testing productivity.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
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spelling cern-16221852022-08-17T13:32:07Zdoi:10.1088/1742-6596/513/6/062031http://cds.cern.ch/record/1622185engMedrano Llamas, RamónBarrand, QuentinElmsheuser, JohannesLegger, FedericaSciacca, GianfrancoSciabà, Andreavan der Ster, DanielTesting as a Service with HammerCloudComputing and ComputersHammerCloud was designed and born under the needs of the grid community to test the resources and automate operations from a user perspective. The recent developments in the IT space propose a shift to the software defined data centres, in which every layer of the infrastructure can be offered as a service. Testing and monitoring is an integral part of the development, validation and operations of big systems, like the grid. This area is not escaping the paradigm shift and we are starting to perceive as natural the Testing as a Service (TaaS) offerings, which allow testing any infrastructure service, such as the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platforms being deployed in many grid sites, both from the functional and stressing perspectives. This work will review the recent developments in HammerCloud and its evolution to a TaaS conception, in particular its deployment on the Agile Infrastructure platform at CERN and the testing of many IaaS providers across Europe in the context of experiment requirements. The first section will review the architectural changes that a service running in the cloud needs, such an orchestration service or new storage requirements in order to provide functional and stress testing. The second section will review the first tests of infrastructure providers on the perspective of the challenges discovered from the architectural point of view. Finally, the third section will evaluate future requirements of scalability and features to increase testing productivity.CERN-IT-2013-002oai:cds.cern.ch:16221852013-10-15
spellingShingle Computing and Computers
Medrano Llamas, Ramón
Barrand, Quentin
Elmsheuser, Johannes
Legger, Federica
Sciacca, Gianfranco
Sciabà, Andrea
van der Ster, Daniel
Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title_full Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title_fullStr Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title_full_unstemmed Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title_short Testing as a Service with HammerCloud
title_sort testing as a service with hammercloud
topic Computing and Computers
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/513/6/062031
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1622185
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