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Mohammed S. Obaidat & Noureddine A. Boudriga 
Fundamentals of Performance Evaluation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems 

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The only singular, all-encompassing textbook on state-of-the-art
technical performance evaluation

Fundamentals of Performance Evaluation of Computer and
Telecommunication Systems uniquely presents all techniques of
performance evaluation of computers systems, communication
networks, and telecommunications in a balanced manner. Written by
the renowned Professor Mohammad S. Obaidat and his coauthor
Professor Noureddine Boudriga, it is also the only resource to
treat computer and telecommunication systems as inseparable issues.
The authors explain the basic concepts of performance evaluation,
applications, performance evaluation metrics, workload types,
benchmarking, and characterization of workload. This is followed by
a review of the basics of probability theory, and then, the main
techniques for performance evaluation–namely measurement,
simulation, and analytic modeling–with case studies and
examples.

* Contains the practical and applicable knowledge necessary for a
successful performance evaluation in a balanced approach

* Reviews measurement tools, benchmark programs, design of
experiments, traffic models, basics of queueing theory, and
operational and mean value analysis

* Covers the techniques for validation and verification of
simulation as well as random number generation, random variate
generation, and testing with examples

* Features numerous examples and case studies, as well as
exercises and problems for use as homework or programming
assignments

Fundamentals of Performance Evaluation of Computer and
Telecommunication Systems is an ideal textbook for graduate
students in computer science, electrical engineering, computer
engineering, and information sciences, technology, and systems. It
is also an excellent reference for practicing engineers and
scientists.
€123.99
payment methods

Table of Content

1. Introduction and Basic Concepts.

1.1. Background.

1.2. Performance Evaluation Viewpoints and Concepts.

1.3. Goals of Performance Evaluation.

1.4. Applications of Performance Evaluation.

1.5. Techniques.

1.6. Metrics of Performance.

1.7. Workload characterization.

1.8. Benchmarking.

1.9. Summary.

Exercises.

2. Probability Theory Review.

2.1 Basic Concepts on Probability Theory.

2.2 Sample Space and Events.

2.3 Conditional Probability and Independence.

2.2 Mean and Median use.

2.3 Geometric, and Harmonic Mean.

2.4 Variance, and Standard Deviation.

2.5 Random Variables.

2.6 Expectation and Variance.

2.7 Density and Distribution Functions.

2.8 Comparing Systems Using Sample Data.

2.9 Regression Models.

2.10 Summary.

Exercises.

3. Measurement/Testing Technique.

3.1. Event and Measurement Strategies.

3.2. Event Tracing.

3.3. Hardware Monitor.

3.4. Software Monitors.

3.5. Hybrid Monitors.

3.6. Traffic Issues and Solutions.

3.7. Accounting Logs.

3.8. Summary.

Exercises.

4. Benchmarking and Capacity Planning.

4.1 Types of Benchmark Programs.

4.2 Common Mistakes in Benchmarking.

4.3 Example Benchmark Programs.

4.4 Procedures of Capacity planning.

4.5 Problems in Capacity Planning.

4.6 Summary.

Exercises.

5. Data Representation and Game Ratio.

5.1 Guidelines for Preparing Plots.

5.2 Charts Used for Data Presentation.

5.3 Program Profiling.

5.4 Common Mistakes in Charts Construction.

5.5 Errors in Experimental Measurements.

5.6 Summary.

Exercises.

6. Basics of Queueing Theory.

6.1 Introduction.

6.2 Queueing Modeling Notations.

6.3 Rules for all Queues.

6.4 Single-Queue, Single (M/M/ 1) System.

6.5. Single-Queue, Multiple Server (M/M/c) System.

6.6 Other Queues.

6.7. Little’s Law.

6.8. Summary.

Exercises.

7. Queueing Networks.

7.1 Definitions.

7.2 Open Queueing Networks.

7.3 Closed Queueing Networks.

7.4 Product-Form Queueing Networks.

7.5 Case Studies.

Exercises.

8. Operational and Mean Value Analysis.

8.1 Utilization Law.

8.2 Little’s Formula.

8.3 Forced Flow Law.

8.4 Interactive Response Time Law.

8.5 Bottleneck Analysis.

8.6 Standard Mean Value Analysis (MVA).

8.7 Scheweitzer’s Approximation of MVA.

8.8 Balanced Job Bounds.

9. Introduction to the Simulation Technique.

9.1 Simulation Types.

9.2 Terminology.

9.3 Random Number Generation Techniques.

9.3.1 Linear Congruential Generators.

9.3.2 Mixed Generators.

9.3.3 Tausworthe Generators.

9.3.5 Extended Fibonici Generators.

9.4 Survey of Commonly Used Random Number Generators.

9.5 Seed Selections.

9.6 Testing Random Number Generators.

9.7 Random Variate Generation Techniques.

9.7.1 Inverse Transformation.

9.7.2 Rejection.

9.7.3 Characterization.

9.7.4 Convolution.

9.7.5 Composition.

9.8 Examples.

Exercises.

10. Commonly Used Distributions in Simulation and Their Applications.

10.1 Exponential.

10.2 Posisson.

10.3 Uniform.

10.5 Normal.

10.6 Weibull.

10.7 Pareto.

10.8 Geometric.

10.9 Gamma.

10.10 Erlang.

10.11 Beta.

10.12 Binomial.

10.13 Bernoulli.

10.14 Chi-Square.

10.15 F Distribution.

10.16 Log Normal.

10.17 Pascal.

10.18 Student’s t Distribution.

10.19 Examples.

Exercises.

11. Analysis of Simulation Outputs.

11.1 Introduction.

11.2 Vérification Techniques.

11.3 Validation techniques.

11.4 Techniques for Transient Removal.

11.5 Techniques for Termination of Simulation and Stopping Criteria.

Exercises.

12. Simulation Software.

12.1 General Purpose Languages.

12.2 Simulation languages.

12.3 Object-Oriented languages.

12.3.1 Standard Object-Oriented Languages.

12.3.2 Objected-oriented Simulation Languages.

12.4 Simulation Packages Used for Simulation of Computer and Telecommunications Systems.

12.4 Case Studies.

Exercises.

About the author

Professor Mohammad S. Obaidat is an internationally well-known academic/researcher/scientist. He received his Ph.D. and M. S. degrees in Computer Engineering with a minor in Computer Science from the Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA. Dr. Obaidat is currently a tenured full Professor of Computer Science at Monmouth University, NJ, USA. Among his previous positions are Chair of the Department of Computer Science and Director of the Graduate Program at Monmouth University and a faculty member at the City University of New York. He has received extensive research funding and has published over two hundred and ten (210) refereed technical articles in refereed scholarly journals and proceedings of refereed international conferences. He is the co-author of the book entitled, ‘Wireless Networks’ to be published by Wiley in August 2002.?Noureddine Boudriga is a professor at the School of Telecommunications at Catharge University in Tunis, Tunisia.
Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 480 ● ISBN 9780470567197 ● File size 3.2 MB ● Publisher John Wiley & Sons ● Published 2010 ● Edition 1 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 2319944 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
Requires a DRM capable ebook reader

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