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Conference Paper (published)

Handling Policy Conflicts in Call Control

Details

Citation

Blair L & Turner KJ (2005) Handling Policy Conflicts in Call Control. In: Reiff-Marganiec S & Ryan MD (eds.) Feature Interactions in Telecommunications and Software Systems VIII. ICFI'05: 8th International Conference on Feature Interactions in Telecommunications and Software Systems, University of Leicester, 28.06.2005-30.06.2005. Amsterdam: IOS Press, pp. 39-57. http://www.iospress.nl/html/9781586035242.php

Abstract
Policies are becoming increasingly important in modern computer systems as a mechanism for end users and organisations to exhibit a level of control over software. Policies have long been established as an effective mechanism for enabling appropriate access control over resources, and for enforcing security considerations. However they are now becoming valued as a more general management mechanism for large-scale heterogeneous systems, including those exhibiting adaptive or autonomic behaviour. In the telecommunications domain, features have been widely used to provide users with (limited) control over calls. However, features have the disadvantage that they are low-level and implementation-oriented in nature. Furthermore, apart from limited parameterisation of some features, they tend to be very inflexible. Policies, in contrast, have the potential to be much higher-level, goaloriented, and very flexible. This paper presents an architecture and its realisation for distributed and hierarchical policies within the telecommunications domain. The work deals with the important issue of policy conflict – the analogy of feature interaction.

Keywords
; Computer software Quality control; Computer software Reliability; Computer programming Management; Telecommunication

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2005
URL
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PublisherIOS Press
Publisher URL
Place of publicationAmsterdam
ISBN9781586035242
ConferenceICFI'05: 8th International Conference on Feature Interactions in Telecommunications and Software Systems
Conference locationUniversity of Leicester
Dates

People (1)

Professor KEN Turner

Professor KEN Turner

Emeritus Professor, Computing Science

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