Characterizing locality, evolution, and life span of accesses in enterprise media server workloads
NOSSDAV '02 Proceedings of the 12th international workshop on Network and operating systems support for digital audio and video
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
A Quantitative Evaluation of Dissemination-Time Preservation Metadata
ECDL '08 Proceedings of the 12th European conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries
Changes in the Web from 2000 to 2007
DSOM '08 Proceedings of the 19th IFIP/IEEE international workshop on Distributed Systems: Operations and Management: Managing Large-Scale Service Deployment
Automated anomaly detection and performance modeling of enterprise applications
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
Optimizing the access to read-only data in grid computing
DAIS'05 Proceedings of the 5th IFIP WG 6.1 international conference on Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems
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Abstract: Our goal is to develop a web server log analysis tool that produces a web site profile and its system resource usage in a way useful to service providers. Understanding the nature of traffic to the web site is crucial in properly designing site support infrastructure, especially for large, busy sites. The main questions we address in this paper are the new access patterns of today's WWW, how to characterize dynamics or evolution of web sites, and how to measure the rate of changes. We propose a set of new metrics to characterize the site dynamics, and we illustrate them with analysis of three different web sites.