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Main Authors: Pittl, Benedikt, Mach, Werner, Schikuta, Erich
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.08868
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author Pittl, Benedikt
Mach, Werner
Schikuta, Erich
author_facet Pittl, Benedikt
Mach, Werner
Schikuta, Erich
contents Today, static cloud markets where consumers purchase services directly from providers are dominating. Thus, consumers neither negotiate the price nor the characteristics of the service. In recent years, providers have adopted more dynamic trading mechanisms, as e.g. Amazon's EC2 platform shows: In addition to the reservation marketspace and the on-demand marketspace, Amazon offers a spot marketspace where consumers can bid for virtual machines. This spot marketspace was extended with spot blocks, and recently Amazon reworked the bidding options. In addition, other cloud providers, such as Virtustream, adopt dynamic trading mechanisms. The scientific community envisions autonomous multi-round negotiations for realizing future cloud marketspaces. Consequently, consumers and providers exchange offers and counteroffers to reach an agreement. This helps providers increase the utilization of their datacenters, while consumers can purchase highly customized cloud services. In the paper at hand, we present a survey on multi-round bilateral negotiation strategies for trading cloud resources. Thus, we analyzed peer-reviewed articles in order to identify trends, gaps, similarities, and the scope of such negotiation strategies. In addition, we surveyed the formalism that the scientific community uses to describe such strategies. Based on these findings, we derived recommendations for creating and documenting bilateral multi-round negotiation strategies to foster their implementation in the industry.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_08868
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Survey on Bilateral Multi-Round Cloud-SLA Negotiation Strategies
Pittl, Benedikt
Mach, Werner
Schikuta, Erich
Computer Science and Game Theory
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
91B26
J.1; J.4
Today, static cloud markets where consumers purchase services directly from providers are dominating. Thus, consumers neither negotiate the price nor the characteristics of the service. In recent years, providers have adopted more dynamic trading mechanisms, as e.g. Amazon's EC2 platform shows: In addition to the reservation marketspace and the on-demand marketspace, Amazon offers a spot marketspace where consumers can bid for virtual machines. This spot marketspace was extended with spot blocks, and recently Amazon reworked the bidding options. In addition, other cloud providers, such as Virtustream, adopt dynamic trading mechanisms. The scientific community envisions autonomous multi-round negotiations for realizing future cloud marketspaces. Consequently, consumers and providers exchange offers and counteroffers to reach an agreement. This helps providers increase the utilization of their datacenters, while consumers can purchase highly customized cloud services. In the paper at hand, we present a survey on multi-round bilateral negotiation strategies for trading cloud resources. Thus, we analyzed peer-reviewed articles in order to identify trends, gaps, similarities, and the scope of such negotiation strategies. In addition, we surveyed the formalism that the scientific community uses to describe such strategies. Based on these findings, we derived recommendations for creating and documenting bilateral multi-round negotiation strategies to foster their implementation in the industry.
title A Survey on Bilateral Multi-Round Cloud-SLA Negotiation Strategies
topic Computer Science and Game Theory
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
91B26
J.1; J.4
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.08868