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Clabacus: A Financial Economic Model for Pricing Cloud Compute Commodities

Cloud computing at a high level comprises of the availability of hardware, software
and technical support via a network protocol to a remote client on a pay-per-use basis.
Businesses using Cloud resources has been increasing steadily in the very recent past
and the number of Cloud service providers (CSP) are increasing as well. The challenges that characterize a Cloud data center include: on-demand service, elasticity,
resources pooling, broad network access, service meters. As the customer base is in
creasing and their resource requirement and usage pattern has been becoming highly
volatile, proper utilization of the resources and generating revenue by appropriately
charging the clients for their uses has become an even more challenging research
problem. In other words, Cloud resource pricing has emerged as an important and
pressing problem to study for ever increasing utility of Cloud computing.
Literature review reveals that there are economy-based models (cash flow, net
present value etc.) used for charging mechanism suggested by many researchers. Most
of these models are rigid that they are not build with the core of Cloud - elasticity
in mind. Also, the economic models do not provide flexibility of the economy of scale to either increase or decrease the resource requirement and appropriately charge for
such increase or decrease in resource use.
For my thesis, I have designed and developed a Cloud resources pricing model that
satisfies two important constraints: the dynamic ability of the model to provide a high
satisfaction guarantee measured as Quality of Service (QoS) - from users perspectives,
and profitability constraints - from the Cloud service providers perspectives. I have
employed financial option theory and treated the Cloud resources as underlying assets
to capture the realistic value of the Cloud Compute Commodities (C3). I have priced
the Cloud resources using my model.
Through this research, I show that the Cloud parameters can be mapped to financial economic model and that this model can be effectively implemented for resource
pricing purpose. I discuss the results of pricing Cloud Compute Commodities (C3)
for various input parameters, such as the age of the resource and quality of service. / February 2016

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MANITOBA/oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/31871
Date04 October 2016
CreatorsSharma, Bhanu
ContributorsThulasiram, Ruppa (Computer Science) Thulasiraman, Parimala (Computer Science), Irani, Pourang (Computer Science) Appadoo, Srimantoorao S. (Supply chain management), Khan, Samme U. (North Dakota State University)
Source SetsUniversity of Manitoba Canada
Detected LanguageEnglish

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