Distributed Systems
We Make Services Valuable
The Distributed Systems (DSY) research group of the InIT focuses on scalable and reliable implementation of sophisticated IT-based services. We address questions such as:
- What architecture best suits your specific cloud application?
- Which service model (IaaS, CaaS, PaaS, FaaS, ...) ensures optimal implementation of an application?
- Which tools are needed for development, operation and monitoring of the services?
- How to offer applications "as a service" (SaaS)?
- How to monetize modern IT services?
- How to integrate the "physical world" into complex IT services?
The research group is engaged in international projects within the EU research framework and works closely with partners from the private sector on innovative products within Innosuisse funded or directly financed projects.
The knowledge gained from applied research and development is transferred to students of computer science courses in the following modules:
Cloud Computing
The Init Cloud Computing Lab (ICCLAB) is dedicated to the automated deployment, operation and usage of configurable, highly scalable and resilient IT resources on a pay-per-use basis. In addition to infrastructure virtualization, this includes platform services for automated application delivery, scalable back-end, and monitoring of services and applications.
Service Prototyping
The Service Prototyping Lab (SPLAB) addresses the implementation and validation of complex services in cloud or post-cloud environments. In addition to the migration of existing services to the cloud, the main focus is on modern application architectures (Cloud Native Applications, Microservices, Serverless), the provisioning of tools for optimal implementation, the experimental validation of concepts and their monetization (Cloud Accounting and Billing).
Cloud Robotics
The Init Cloud Comupting Lab (ICCLAB) also addresses the integration of robotic applications into complex networked services. The usage of elastic cloud services allows to extend the capabilities of robots (computing power, context information, artificial intelligence, ...) as well as to manage and coordinate them. Programming frameworks and automation services enable developers to integrate robots into services without having in-depth knowledge at device level.
As part of the reorganization of the research database, the previous lists of research projects are no longer available. Die Zukunft geht in Richtung Volltextsuche und Filterung, um bestmögliche Suchergebnisse für unsere Besucher:innen zur Verfügung zu stellen.
In the meantime, you can easily find the projects via text search using the following link: «To the new search in the project database»
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Edmonds, Andrew; Bohnert, Thomas Michael; Marti, Christof,
2013.
In:
Second National Conference on Cloud Computing and Commerce, Dublin, Ireland, 16 April 2013.
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Edmonds, Andrew; Bohnert, Thomas Michael; Marti, Christof; Zehnder, Thomas; Graf, Lukas; Aeschlimann, Philipp,
2013.
The OpenStack cloud computing framework and ecosystem.
In:
Datacenter Dynamics Converged, Zürich, 24 April 2013.
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Kunszt, Peter; Maffioletti, Sergio; Flanders, Dean; Eurich, Markus; Schiller, Eryk; Bohnert, Thomas Michael; Edmonds, Andy; Stockinger, Heinz; Jamakovic-Kapic, Almerima; Haug, Sigve; Flury, Placi; Leinen, Simon,
2013.
Towards a Swiss national research infrastructure [paper].
In:
Euro-Par 2013: Parallel Processing Workshops, Aachen, Germany, 26-27 August 2013.
pp. 157-166.
Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 8374.
Available from: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-54420-0_16
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Zimmerli, Frank; Rigley, Vanessa; Senti, Patrik; Gilardi, Simona; Baudinot, Gerold; Stublia, Daniel; Crowther, Adam,
2000.
Zürich:
CGI Logical.