Abstract: Part of network management is collecting information about the activities that go on around a
distributed system and analyzing it in real time, at a deferred moment, or both. The reason such information may
be stored in log files and analyzed later is to data-mine it so that interesting, unusual, or abnormal patterns can be
discovered. In this paper we propose defining patterns in network activity logs using a dialect of First Order
Temporal Logics (FOTL), called First Order Temporal Logic with Duration Constrains (FOTLDC). This logic is
powerful enough to describe most network activity patterns because it can handle both causal and temporal
correlations. Existing results for data-mining patterns with similar structure give us the confidence that discovering
DFOTL patterns in network activity logs can be done efficiently.
Keywords: network management, temporal logics
ACM Classification Keywords: C.2.3 Network Operations – network management; F.4.1 Mathematical Logic – temporal logic
Link:
DEFINING NETWORK ACTIVITY PATTERNS USING FIRST ORDER TEMPORAL LOGICS
Lubomir Stanchev
http://www.foibg.com/ijita/vol12/ijita12-4-p03.pdf