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Monitoring Event Frequencies

The monitoring of event frequencies can be used to recognize behavioral anomalies, to identify trends, and to deduce or discard hypotheses about the underlying system. For example, the performance of a web server may be monitored based on the ratio of the total count of requests from the least and most active clients. Exact frequency monitoring, however, can be prohibitively expensive; in the above example it would require as many counters as there are clients. In this paper, we propose the efficient probabilistic monitoring of common frequency properties, including the mode (i.e., the most common event) and the median of an event sequence. We define a logic to express composite frequency properties as a combination of atomic frequency properties. Our main contribution is an algorithm that, under suitable probabilistic assumptions, can be used to monitor these important frequency properties with four counters, independent of the number of different events. Our algorithm samples longer and longer subwords of an infinite event sequence. We prove the almost-sure convergence of our algorithm by generalizing ergodic theory from increasing-length prefixes to increasing-length subwords of

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Related contextCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipTopic signalTopic signalWMonitoring Event Frequenciespreprint / 2020AThomas FerrèreResearcherAThomas A. HenzingerResearcherABernhard KraglResearcherTLogic in Computer Science2208 worksTFormal Languages and Au...714 works
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Monitoring Event Frequencies

preprint / 2020

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