The previous article talked about workflows and multitenant systems. This article talks about innovations in cloud-based multitenant systems or solutions for short which include those for industry specific solutions, authoritative marketplace offerings, fleet deployment of agents, and solution-based automation.
In this
section, we focus on transitions specifically. When control passes from
the tenant workload to the multitenant infrastructure and back, there is an
opportunity to add routines that can not only safeguard the state of the caller
but also improve the statistics and bookkeeping withing the solution. It is
even possible to introduce a tag or inject color into the data stream so that
its propagation throughout the cloud can be made visible. This improves
forensics as well as the detection of resources that are underutilized for
advice towards application optimization.
Similarly
adding headers before and after data segments from specific callers enables the
study of those data manipulations by all parties during its lifetime. This
study could include stack captures that are authoritative and
comprehensive.
A lot of
information can be obtained when specific bookkeeping is added to sequences or
patterns of usages or by specific callers. Since this additional bookkeeping
might introduce regressions in performance optimizations for the application,
it becomes important to turn it on for as granular a session as possible and
for the duration specified by the administrator. In this regard, feature flags,
variables, and dynamic behavior from the code will be helpful in the isolation
of the control and data path under investigation.
Finally,
system performance and behavior capture has traditionally been curated for
manual inspection. With the advent of AI and the popularity of data mining
techniques, this machine data could automate analysis that draws insights and
makes recommendations to the application authors. This strategy could involve
cross-application comparisons and associations, historical trends, and
collaborative filtering. Some common scenarios are described here.
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