Ivona Brandic

Ivona Brandic is Assistant Professor at the Distributed Systems Group, Information Systems Institute, Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien). Prior to that, she was Assistant Professor at the Department of Scientific Computing, Vienna University. She received her PhD degree from Vienna University of Technology in 2007. From 2003 to 2007 she participated in the special research project AURORA (Advanced Models, Applications and Software Systems for High Performance Computing) and the European Union's GEMSS (Grid-Enabled Medical Simulation Services) project. She is involved in the European Union's SCube project and she is leading the Austrian national FoSII (Foundations of Self-governing ICT Infrastructures) project funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWTF). She is Management Committee member of the European Commission's COST Action on Energy Efficient Large Scale Distributed Systems. From June-August 2008 she was visiting researcher at the University of Melbourne. Her interests comprise SLA and QoS management, Service-oriented architectures, autonomic computing, workflow management, and large scale distributed systems (Cloud, Grid, Cluster, etc.).

Publications

Application-Level Monitoring and SLA Violation Detection for Multi-Tenant Cloud Services
Vincent C. Emeakaroha, Marco A. S. Netto, Ivona Brandic, César A. F. De Rose. © 2015. 30 pages.
Keeping the quality of service defined by Service Level Agreements (SLAs) is a key factor to facilitate business operations of Cloud providers. SLA enforcement relies on resource...
Achieving Federated and Self-Manageable Cloud Infrastructures: Theory and Practice
Massimo Villari, Ivona Brandic, Francesco Tusa. © 2012. 489 pages.
Cloud computing presents a promising approach for implementing scalable information and communications technology systems for private and public, individual, community, and...
Economic Analysis of the SLA Mapping Approach for Cloud Computing Goods
Michael Maurer, Vincent C. Emeakaroha, Ivona Brandic. © 2012. 20 pages.
Because of the large number of different types of service level agreements (SLAs), computing resource markets face the challenge of low market liquidity. The authors therefore...