Seeking Closure in an Open World: A Behavioral Agent Approach to Configuration Management

Abstract: 

We present a new model of configuration management based upon a hierarchy of simple communicating autonomous agents. Each of these agents is responsible for a "closure": a domain of "semantic predictability" in which declarative commands to the agent have a simple, persistent, portable, and documented effect upon subsequent observable behavior. Closures are built bottom-up to form a management hierarchy based upon the pre-existing dependencies between subsystems in a complex system. Closure agents decompose configuration management via a modularity of effect and behavior that promises to eventually lead to self-organizing systems driven entirely by behavioral specifications, where a system's configuration is free of details that have no observable effect upon system.

BibTeX
@inproceedings {270073,
author = {John Hart and Elizabeth G. Idhaw and Dominic Kallas},
title = {Seeking Closure in an Open World: A Behavioral Agent Approach to Configuration Management},
booktitle = {17th Large Installation Systems Administration Conference (LISA 03)},
year = {2003},
address = {San Diego, CA },
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa-03/seeking-closure-open-world-behavioral-agent-approach-configuration-management},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = oct
}