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CM-factory for enabling enterprise migration to cloud created by Charafeddine El Houssaini, Hatim Hafiddi, Mahmoud Nassar and Abdelaziz Kriouile

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: International journal of cloud computing ; Volume 4 , number 3 ,United Kingdom: Inderscience, 2015Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISSN:
  • 2043-9989
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • QA76.S85 INT
Online resources: Abstract: Since the adoption of cloud is going to be evidenced in the future, the migration challenge is shifting from why to how to perform the move from in-house to cloud and eventually from provider to another. Actually, carry on migration by selecting a cloud service according to basic comparison of offers presents some shortcomings and globally do not deal with the enterprise concerns. We tackle this problem by proposing several contributions. First, we model a cloud service template that is structured on three parts, namely service-description, service-parameters and the dedicated migration part service-migration. Second, we introduce a weight concept to describe the importance of each parameter when formulating the needs of a service target. Implicitly, the enterprise concerns are expressed. Third, we nominate the cloud-migration factory framework, which processes the providers' offers according to an adapted algorithm, in order to select the suitable provider for the migration.
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Since the adoption of cloud is going to be evidenced in the future, the migration challenge is shifting from why to how to perform the move from in-house to cloud and eventually from provider to another. Actually, carry on migration by selecting a cloud service according to basic comparison of offers presents some shortcomings and globally do not deal with the enterprise concerns. We tackle this problem by proposing several contributions. First, we model a cloud service template that is structured on three parts, namely service-description, service-parameters and the dedicated migration part service-migration. Second, we introduce a weight concept to describe the importance of each parameter when formulating the needs of a service target. Implicitly, the enterprise concerns are expressed. Third, we nominate the cloud-migration factory framework, which processes the providers' offers according to an adapted algorithm, in order to select the suitable provider for the migration.

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