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Tenant-centric Sub-Tenancy Architecture in Software-as-a-Service
Author(s) -
WeiTek Tsai,
Peide Zhong,
Yig Chen
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
caai transactions on intelligence technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.613
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 2468-6557
pISSN - 2468-2322
DOI - 10.1016/j.trit.2016.08.002
Subject(s) - software as a service , multitenancy , computer science , architecture , crowdsourcing , service (business) , service oriented architecture , software engineering , ranking (information retrieval) , software architecture , reference architecture , component (thermodynamics) , software , distributed computing , database , world wide web , operating system , software development , web service , artificial intelligence , art , physics , visual arts , thermodynamics , economy , economics
Multi-tenancy architecture (MTA) is often used in Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and the central idea is that multiple tenant applications can be developed using components stored in the SaaS infrastructure. Recently, MTA has been extended to allow a tenant application to have its own sub-tenants, where the tenant application acts like a SaaS infrastructure. In other words, MTA is extended to STA (Sub-Tenancy Architecture). In STA, each tenant application needs not only to develop its own functionalities, but also to prepare an infrastructure to allow its sub-tenants to develop customized applications. This paper applies Crowdsourcing as the core to STA component in the development life cycle. In addition, to discovering adequate fit tenant developers or components to help build and compose new components, dynamic and static ranking models are proposed. Furthermore, rank computation architecture is presented to deal with the case when the number of tenants and components becomes huge. Finally, experiments are performed to demonstrate that the ranking models and the rank computation architecture work as design

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