Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation

Digital-transformation initiatives have led to major efficiencies and cost savings but at the cost of consuming nearly 10 percent of the world's electricity. Energy consumption research has increased datacentre, network, and hardware efficiency, but a neglected aspect of energy research has bee...

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Main Author: Woods, Eoin
Published: University of East London 2018
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768464
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7684642019-04-03T06:48:05ZAddressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operationWoods, Eoin2018Digital-transformation initiatives have led to major efficiencies and cost savings but at the cost of consuming nearly 10 percent of the world's electricity. Energy consumption research has increased datacentre, network, and hardware efficiency, but a neglected aspect of energy research has been the energy consumption of the software applications that underpin digital transformation. To date, software architects have lacked the knowledge, guidance, and tools to allow them to understand the energy properties of their systems. The research reported in this thesis begins to address this situation by developing practical knowledge, techniques, and tools to allow software architects to play their part in controlling the energy consumption of our modern digital world. The work commences with an investigation into formal architectural description languages, through a literature review and a case study, resulting in two research contributions, namely a comprehensive systematic survey of architecture description languages from 1991 to 2015, and a case study of practical ADL use at scale in industry. The second part of the research investigates how to assist architects in prioritising energy efficiency through a study of how experienced architects focus their attention for maximum effectiveness, which leads to the development of a model to guide architecture practitioners, which is validated and refined through a large survey of practising software architects. The research contribution is a refined and validated model for architectural effort prioritisation. The third aspect of the research examines the energy-related guidance available to architects and having found little generally applicable advice, analyses a significant industrial case study to understand how leading-edge practitioners addressed energy efficiency, contributing a set of three energy-related architectural principles, which can be used to guide architects in improving application energy efficiency. Finally, we consider the practical problem of understanding the runtime energy properties of a system, and designed a novel approach to estimate the energy consumption of execution scenarios via application execution tracing and a cost-based energy model. We created a proof of concept implementation of the approach and validated its consistency and correctness through practical testing. The contribution of this work was twofold, namely the design of a practical system for allocating energy to application execution scenarios, and a tested, open-source, proof-of-concept implementation of the system. Hence, the result of this work is six distinct contributions to knowledge in the area of ADLs (the survey and practical case study), architectural practice (the prioritisation model and the architectural principles for energy efficiency) and application energy efficiency (the design of the energy allocation system and the proof-of-concept implementation), which collectively can help architects to treat energy efficiency as a first class architectural concern in their work.University of East London10.15123/PUB.7951https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768464http://roar.uel.ac.uk/7951/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description Digital-transformation initiatives have led to major efficiencies and cost savings but at the cost of consuming nearly 10 percent of the world's electricity. Energy consumption research has increased datacentre, network, and hardware efficiency, but a neglected aspect of energy research has been the energy consumption of the software applications that underpin digital transformation. To date, software architects have lacked the knowledge, guidance, and tools to allow them to understand the energy properties of their systems. The research reported in this thesis begins to address this situation by developing practical knowledge, techniques, and tools to allow software architects to play their part in controlling the energy consumption of our modern digital world. The work commences with an investigation into formal architectural description languages, through a literature review and a case study, resulting in two research contributions, namely a comprehensive systematic survey of architecture description languages from 1991 to 2015, and a case study of practical ADL use at scale in industry. The second part of the research investigates how to assist architects in prioritising energy efficiency through a study of how experienced architects focus their attention for maximum effectiveness, which leads to the development of a model to guide architecture practitioners, which is validated and refined through a large survey of practising software architects. The research contribution is a refined and validated model for architectural effort prioritisation. The third aspect of the research examines the energy-related guidance available to architects and having found little generally applicable advice, analyses a significant industrial case study to understand how leading-edge practitioners addressed energy efficiency, contributing a set of three energy-related architectural principles, which can be used to guide architects in improving application energy efficiency. Finally, we consider the practical problem of understanding the runtime energy properties of a system, and designed a novel approach to estimate the energy consumption of execution scenarios via application execution tracing and a cost-based energy model. We created a proof of concept implementation of the approach and validated its consistency and correctness through practical testing. The contribution of this work was twofold, namely the design of a practical system for allocating energy to application execution scenarios, and a tested, open-source, proof-of-concept implementation of the system. Hence, the result of this work is six distinct contributions to knowledge in the area of ADLs (the survey and practical case study), architectural practice (the prioritisation model and the architectural principles for energy efficiency) and application energy efficiency (the design of the energy allocation system and the proof-of-concept implementation), which collectively can help architects to treat energy efficiency as a first class architectural concern in their work.
author Woods, Eoin
spellingShingle Woods, Eoin
Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
author_facet Woods, Eoin
author_sort Woods, Eoin
title Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
title_short Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
title_full Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
title_fullStr Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
title_full_unstemmed Addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
title_sort addressing energy efficiency in system design : a journey from architecture to operation
publisher University of East London
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768464
work_keys_str_mv AT woodseoin addressingenergyefficiencyinsystemdesignajourneyfromarchitecturetooperation
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