02297nas a2200253 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002260001200043653001500055653002000070653002700090653001000117653000900127100002600136700002700162700002300189700002600212245007600238856007900314300001000393490000600403520162000409022001402029 2023 d c03/202310aBlockchain10aCloud Computing10aDistributed Computing10aPaxos10aRaft1 aAlberto Arias Maestro1 aOscar Sanjuan-Martinez1 aAnkur M. Teredesai1 aVicente García-Díaz00aBlockchain Based Cloud Management Architecture for Maximum Availability uhttps://www.ijimai.org/journal/sites/default/files/2023-02/ijimai8_1_8.pdf a88-940 v83 aContemporary cloud application and Edge computing orchestration systems rely on controller/worker design patterns to allocate, distribute, and manage resources. Standard solutions like Apache Mesos, Docker Swarm, and Kubernetes can span multiple zones at data centers, multiple global regions, and even consumer point of presence locations. Previous research has concluded that random network partitions cannot be avoided in these scenarios, leaving system designers to choose between consistency and availability, as defined by the CAP theorem. Controller/worker architectures guarantee configuration consistency via the employment of redundant storage systems, in most cases coordinated via consensus algorithms such as Paxos or Raft. These algorithms ensure information consistency against network failures while decreasing availability as network regions increase. Mainstream blockchain technology provides a solution to this compromise while decentralizing control via a fully distributed architecture coordinated through Byzantine-resistant consensus algorithms. This research proposes a blockchain-based decentralized architecture for cloud resource management systems. We analyze and compare the characteristics of the proposed architecture concerning the consistency, availability, and partition resistance of architectures that rely on Paxos/Raft distributed data stores. Our research demonstrates that the proposed blockchain-based decentralized architecture noticeably increases the system availability, including cases of network partitioning, without a significant impact on configuration consistency. a1989-1660