FEMOSAA: Feature Guided and Knee Driven Multi-Objective Optimization for Self-Adaptive Software

August 31, 2016 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology

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Authors Tao Chen, Ke Li, Rami Bahsoon, Xin Yao arXiv ID 1608.08933 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 60 Venue ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Self-adaptive software (SAS) can reconfigure itself to adapt to the changing environment at runtime, aiming for continually optimizing conflicted non-functional objectives, e.g., response time, energy consumption, throughput and cost etc. In this paper, we present Feature guided and knEe driven Multi-Objective optimization for Self-Adaptive softwAre (FEMOSAA), a novel framework that automatically synergizes the feature model and Multi-Objective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA), to optimize SAS at runtime. FEMOSAA operates in two phases: at design time, FEMOSAA automatically transposes the engineers' design of SAS, expressed as a feature model, to fit the MOEA, creating new chromosome representation and reproduction operators. At runtime, FEMOSAA utilizes the feature model as domain knowledge to guide the search and further extend the MOEA, providing a larger chance for finding better solutions. In addition, we have designed a new method to search for the knee solutions, which can achieve a balanced trade-off. We comprehensively evaluated FEMOSAA on two running SAS: one is a highly complex SAS with various adaptable real-world software under the realistic workload trace, another is a service-oriented SAS that can be dynamically composed from services. In particular, we compared the effectiveness and overhead of FEMOSAA against four of its variants and three other search-based frameworks for SAS under various scenarios, including three commonly applied MOEAs, two workload patterns and diverse conflicting quality objectives. The results reveal the effectiveness of FEMOSAA and its superiority over the others with high statistical significance and non-trivial effect sizes.
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