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Jaap Kabbedijk; Cor-Paul Bezemer; Andy Zaidman; Slinger Jansen
Defining Multi-Tenancy: A Structured Mapping Study on the Academic and Industrial Perspective Journal Article
Journal of Systems and Software (JSS), 100 , pp. 139-148, 2015.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Academic perspective, Definition, Industrial perspective, Multi-tenancy, Systematic mapping study
@article{KabbedijkJSS14,
title = {Defining Multi-Tenancy: A Structured Mapping Study on the Academic and Industrial Perspective},
author = {Jaap Kabbedijk and Cor-Paul Bezemer and Andy Zaidman and Slinger Jansen},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
urldate = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Journal of Systems and Software (JSS)},
volume = {100},
pages = {139-148},
publisher = {Elsevier},
abstract = {Software as a service is frequently offered in a multi-tenant style, where customers of the application and their end-users share resources such as software and hardware among all users, without necessarily sharing data. It is surprising that, with such a popular paradigm, little agreement exists with regard to the definition, domain, and challenges of multi-tenancy. This absence is detrimental to the research community and the industry, as it hampers progress in the domain of multi-tenancy and enables organizations and academics to wield their own definitions to further their commercial or research agendas.
In this article, a systematic mapping study on multi-tenancy is described in which 761 academic papers and 371 industrial blogs are analysed. Both the industrial and academic perspective are assessed, in order to get a complete overview. The definition and topic maps provide a comprehensive overview of the domain, while the research agenda, listing four important research topics, provides a roadmap for future research efforts.},
keywords = {Academic perspective, Definition, Industrial perspective, Multi-tenancy, Systematic mapping study},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Software as a service is frequently offered in a multi-tenant style, where customers of the application and their end-users share resources such as software and hardware among all users, without necessarily sharing data. It is surprising that, with such a popular paradigm, little agreement exists with regard to the definition, domain, and challenges of multi-tenancy. This absence is detrimental to the research community and the industry, as it hampers progress in the domain of multi-tenancy and enables organizations and academics to wield their own definitions to further their commercial or research agendas.
In this article, a systematic mapping study on multi-tenancy is described in which 761 academic papers and 371 industrial blogs are analysed. Both the industrial and academic perspective are assessed, in order to get a complete overview. The definition and topic maps provide a comprehensive overview of the domain, while the research agenda, listing four important research topics, provides a roadmap for future research efforts.
In this article, a systematic mapping study on multi-tenancy is described in which 761 academic papers and 371 industrial blogs are analysed. Both the industrial and academic perspective are assessed, in order to get a complete overview. The definition and topic maps provide a comprehensive overview of the domain, while the research agenda, listing four important research topics, provides a roadmap for future research efforts.