TY - BOOK ID - 65497795 TI - Systems Benchmarking : For Scientists and Engineers AU - Kounev, Samuel. AU - Lange, Klaus-Dieter. AU - von Kistowski, Jóakim. PY - 2020 SN - 3030417050 3030417042 PB - Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Computer system failures. KW - Software engineering. KW - Management information systems. KW - System Performance and Evaluation. KW - Software Engineering. KW - Software Management. KW - Computer-based information systems KW - EIS (Information systems) KW - Executive information systems KW - MIS (Information systems) KW - Sociotechnical systems KW - Information resources management KW - Management KW - Computer software engineering KW - Engineering KW - Computer failures KW - Computer malfunctions KW - Computer systems KW - Failure of computer systems KW - System failures (Engineering) KW - Fault-tolerant computing KW - Communication systems KW - Failures KW - Electronic digital computers—Evaluation. KW - Software engineering—Management. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:65497795 AB - This book serves as both a textbook and handbook on the benchmarking of systems and components used as building blocks of modern information and communication technology applications. It provides theoretical and practical foundations as well as an in-depth exploration of modern benchmarks and benchmark development. The book is divided into two parts: foundations and applications. The first part introduces the foundations of benchmarking as a discipline, covering the three fundamental elements of each benchmarking approach: metrics, workloads, and measurement methodology. The second part focuses on different application areas, presenting contributions in specific fields of benchmark development. These contributions address the unique challenges that arise in the conception and development of benchmarks for specific systems or subsystems, and demonstrate how the foundations and concepts in the first part of the book are being used in existing benchmarks. Further, the book presents a number of concrete applications and case studies based on input from leading benchmark developers from consortia such as the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC) and the Transaction Processing Performance Council (TPC). Providing both practical and theoretical foundations, as well as a detailed discussion of modern benchmarks and their development, the book is intended as a handbook for professionals and researchers working in areas related to benchmarking. It offers an up-to-date point of reference for existing work as well as latest results, research challenges, and future research directions. It also can be used as a textbook for graduate and postgraduate students studying any of the many subjects related to benchmarking. While readers are assumed to be familiar with the principles and practices of computer science, as well as software and systems engineering, no specific expertise in any subfield of these disciplines is required. “This book should be required reading for anyone interested in making good benchmarks.” – from the Foreword by David Patterson, 2017 ACM A.M. Turing Award Laureate. ER -