Title
Survivability Analysis Of Networked Systems
Abstract
Survivability is the ability of a system to continue operating despite the presence of abnormal events such as failures and intrusions. Ensuring system survivability has increased in importance as critical infrastructures have become heavily dependent on computers. In this paper we present a systematic method for performing survivability analysis of networked systems. An architect injects failure and intrusion events into a system model and then visualizes the effects of the injected events in the form of scenario graphs. Our method enables further global analyses, such as reliability, latency, and cost-benefit analyses, where mathematical techniques used in different domains are combined in a systematic manner. We illustrate our ideas on an abstract model of the United States Payment System.
Year
DOI
Venue
2001
10.1109/ICSE.2001.919104
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 23RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Keywords
Field
DocType
markov processes,parametric polymorphism,system modeling,visualization,mathematical models,software reliability,frameworks,graph theory,critical infrastructure,layers,pervasive computing,system model,reliability,finance,automation,cost benefit analysis,computer networks,systems analysis,survival analysis
Survivability,Model checking,Computer science,Systems analysis,Markov decision process,Bayesian network,Fault tolerance,Software quality,System model,Reliability engineering
Conference
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
0270-5257
0-7695-1050-7
51
PageRank 
References 
Authors
6.49
11
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
S. Jha17921539.19
Jeannette M. Wing26429874.60