Active Networks and Active Network Management: A Proactive Management Framework by Stephen F. Bush and Amit Kulkarni, Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, Boston, Dordrecht, London, Moscow, 2001, 196 pp. Hardbound, ISBN 0-306-46560-4.
Abstract
Active networking is an exciting new paradigm in digital networking that has
the potential to revolutionize the manner in which communication takes place.
It is an emerging technology, one in which new ideas are constantly being formulated
and new topics of research are springing up even as this book is being written.
This technology is very likely to appeal to a broad spectrum of users from academia
and industry. Therefore, this book was written in a way that enables all these
groups to understand the impact of active networking in their sphere of interest.
Information services managers, network administrators, and e-commerce developers
would like to know the potential benefits of the new technology to their businesses,
networks, and applications. The book introduces the basic active networking
paradigm and its potential impacts on the future of information handling in
general and on communications in particular. This is useful for forward-looking
businesses that wish to actively participate in the development of active networks
and ensure a head start in the integration of the technology in their future
products, be they applications or networks. Areas in which active networking
is likely to make significant impact are identified, and the reader is pointed
to any related ongoing research efforts in the area. The book also provides
a deeper insight into the active networking model for students and researchers,
who seek challenging topics that define or extend frontiers of the technology.
It describes basic components of the model, explains some of the terms used
by the active networking community, and provides the reader with taxonomy of
the research being conducted at the time this book was written. Current efforts
are classified based on typical research areas such as mobility, security, and
management. The intent is to introduce the serious reader to the background
regarding some of the models adopted by the community, to outline outstanding
issues concerning active networking, and to provide a snapshot of the fast-changing
landscape in active networking research. Management is a very important issue
in active networks because of its open nature. The latter half of the book explains
the architectural concepts of a model for managing active networks and the motivation
for a reference model that addresses limitations of the current network management
framework by leveraging the powerful features of active networking to develop
an integrated framework. It also describes a novel application enabled by active
network technology called the Active Virtual Network Management Prediction (AVNMP)
algorithm. AVNMP is a proactive management system; in other words, it provides
the ability to solve a potential problem before it impacts the system by modeling
network devices within the network itself and running that model ahead of real
time.