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Analysis of Application Performance and Its Change via Representative Application Signatures

Mi, Ningfang; Cherkasova, Ludmila; Ozonat, Kivanc; Symons, Julie; Smirni, Evgenia
HP Laboratories

HPL-2008-78

Keyword(s): application change, automation, enterprise applications, transactions, performance models, regression-based approach, Diagnostics tool, workload analysis

Abstract: Application servers are a core component of a multi- tier architecture that has become the industry standard for building scalable client-server applications. A client communicates with a service deployed as a multi-tier application via request-reply transactions. A typical server reply consists of the web page dynamically generated by the application server. The application server may issue multiple database calls while preparing the reply. Understanding the cascading effects of the various tasks that are sprung by a single request-reply transaction is a challenging task. Furthermore, significantly shortened time between new software releases further exacerbates the problem of thoroughly evaluating the performance of an updated application. We address the problem of efficiently diagnosing essential performance changes in application behavior in order to provide timely feedback to application designers and service providers. In this work, we propose a new approach based on an application signature that enables a quick performance comparison of the new application signature against the old one, while the application continues its execution in the production environment. The application signature is built based on new concepts that are introduced here, namely the transaction latency profiles and transaction signatures. These become instrumental for creating an application signature that accurately reflects important performance characteristics. We show that such an application signature is representative and stable under different workload characteristics. We also show that application signatures are robust as they effectively capture changes in transaction times that result from software updates. Application signatures provide a simple and powerful solution that can further be used for efficient capacity planning, anomaly detection, and provisioning of multi-tier applications in rapidly evolving IT environments.

8 Pages

Additional Publication Information: To be published in the 11th IEEE/IFIP Network Operations and Management Symposium (NOM'2008), Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, April 7-11, 2008

External Posting Date: June 21, 2008 [Fulltext]. Approved for External Publication
Internal Posting Date: June 21, 2008 [Fulltext]

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