摘要 |
Data can be categorized into facts, information, hypothesis, and directives. Activities that generate certain categories of data based on other categories of data through the application of knowledge which can be categorized into classifications, assessments, resolutions, and enactments. Activities can be driven by a Classification-Assessment-Resolution-Enactment (CARE) control engine. The CARE control and these categorizations can be used to enhance a multitude of systems, for example diagnostic system, such as through historical record keeping, machine learning, and automation. Such a diagnostic system can include a system that forecasts computing system failures based on the application of knowledge to system vital signs such as thread or stack segment intensity and memory heap usage. These vital signs are facts that can be classified to produce information such as memory leaks, convoy effects, or other problems. Classification can involve the automatic generation of classes, states, observations, predictions, norms, objectives, and the processing of sample intervals having irregular durations. |
主权项 |
1. A computer-implemented method comprising:
identifying a first partition of data with a fact category, a second partition of data with an information category, a third partition of data with a hypothesis category, and a fourth partition of data with a directive category; identifying a first partition of transformative actions with a classification category, a second partition of transformative actions with an assessment category, a third partition of transformative actions with a resolution category, and a fourth partition of transformative actions with an enactment category; invoking a first action to produce a second set of data from the information category; invoking a second action to produce a third set of data from the hypothesis category; invoking a third action to produce a fourth set of data from the directive category; and invoking a fourth action to produce a fifth set of data from the fact category; wherein the method is performed by one or more computing processors. |