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Digital Repositories in Private Clouds

This study explores the use of digital repositories in private cloud environments. Private cloud computing is a cloud computing deployment model where compute and storage infrastructure are hosted on-premise by institutions. Digital repositories are used to manage institutions’ generated content. Th...

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Main Author: Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
Other Authors: Suleman, Hussein
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Computer Science 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
author2 Suleman, Hussein
author_browse Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
Suleman, Hussein
author_facet Suleman, Hussein
Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
author_sort Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
collection Thesis
description This study explores the use of digital repositories in private cloud environments. Private cloud computing is a cloud computing deployment model where compute and storage infrastructure are hosted on-premise by institutions. Digital repositories are used to manage institutions’ generated content. The advancement in cloud computing, the promise of elasticity, and the on-demand resource provisioning features of cloud systems are attractive characteristics that institutions can leverage on in delivering digital content to their audiences. In this study, a cloud computing operating system is deployed, and a means to install, monitor, manage and customise a repository system is developed. The repository system used is DSpace. Eucalyptus cloud software was used to setup a private cloud environment. A prototype application was developed to manage the installation and customisation of DSpace in the cloud environment. The prototype also included a feature to monitor the status of the running DSpace instances. To evaluate the efficiency, installation and customisation of DSpace in the cloud environment, two types of evaluations were carried out – a performance evaluation and a usability study. The performance evaluation was used to ascertain how long it takes to ingest and view items in DSpace. The experiments were carried out with varying numbers of running virtual machine instances in the cloud. The usability study evaluated the ease of installing and customising DSpace with the developed tool, called Lilu. A total of 22 participants took part in the usability study that was carried out within the premises of the University of Cape Town’s Computer Science Department. The participants belonged to 3 groups – experts, intermediate and beginners – based on their technical skill levels. The results show that private cloud environments can run institutional repositories with negligible performance degradation as the number of virtual machine instances in the cloud are increased. From the usability study, the tool developed was positively perceived. Participants in the study were able to install and customise DSpace. Institutional repositories can efficiently be installed and used in private cloud environments. Building tools that enable users to create single-click installations of the repositories, and creating user friendly interfaces to customise repositories would potentially increase the adoption and utilisation of private cloud environments by institutions.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31717
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:42:43.052Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Computer Science
publisherStr Department of Computer Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31717 Digital Repositories in Private Clouds Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa Suleman, Hussein Computer Science This study explores the use of digital repositories in private cloud environments. Private cloud computing is a cloud computing deployment model where compute and storage infrastructure are hosted on-premise by institutions. Digital repositories are used to manage institutions’ generated content. The advancement in cloud computing, the promise of elasticity, and the on-demand resource provisioning features of cloud systems are attractive characteristics that institutions can leverage on in delivering digital content to their audiences. In this study, a cloud computing operating system is deployed, and a means to install, monitor, manage and customise a repository system is developed. The repository system used is DSpace. Eucalyptus cloud software was used to setup a private cloud environment. A prototype application was developed to manage the installation and customisation of DSpace in the cloud environment. The prototype also included a feature to monitor the status of the running DSpace instances. To evaluate the efficiency, installation and customisation of DSpace in the cloud environment, two types of evaluations were carried out – a performance evaluation and a usability study. The performance evaluation was used to ascertain how long it takes to ingest and view items in DSpace. The experiments were carried out with varying numbers of running virtual machine instances in the cloud. The usability study evaluated the ease of installing and customising DSpace with the developed tool, called Lilu. A total of 22 participants took part in the usability study that was carried out within the premises of the University of Cape Town’s Computer Science Department. The participants belonged to 3 groups – experts, intermediate and beginners – based on their technical skill levels. The results show that private cloud environments can run institutional repositories with negligible performance degradation as the number of virtual machine instances in the cloud are increased. From the usability study, the tool developed was positively perceived. Participants in the study were able to install and customise DSpace. Institutional repositories can efficiently be installed and used in private cloud environments. Building tools that enable users to create single-click installations of the repositories, and creating user friendly interfaces to customise repositories would potentially increase the adoption and utilisation of private cloud environments by institutions. 2020-04-30T07:28:48Z 2020-04-30T07:28:48Z 2019 2020-04-28T10:29:14Z Master Thesis Masters MSc https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31717 eng application/pdf Department of Computer Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Computer Science
Lumpa, Mushashu Mwansa
Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
title_full Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
title_fullStr Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
title_full_unstemmed Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
title_short Digital Repositories in Private Clouds
title_sort digital repositories in private clouds
topic Computer Science
url https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31717
work_keys_str_mv AT lumpamushashumwansa digitalrepositoriesinprivateclouds