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There is often confusion in the use of SLAs and SLOs. The SLA is the entire agreement that specifies what service is to be provided, how it is supported, times, locations, costs, performance, and responsibilities of the parties involved. SLOs are specific measurable characteristics of the SLA such as availability, throughput, frequency, response time, or quality. These SLOs together are meant to define the expected service between the provider and the customer and vary depending on the service's urgency, resources, and budget. SLOs provide a quantitative means to define the level of service a customer can expect from a provider.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Rastegari|first1=Yousef|last2=Shams|first2=Fereidoon|date=2015-12-29|title=Optimal Decomposition of Service Level Objectives into Policy Assertions|journal=The Scientific World Journal|language=en|volume=2015|pages=465074|doi=10.1155/2015/465074|issn=2356-6140|pmc=4709918|pmid=26962544|doi-access=free}}</ref>
The SLO are formed by setting goals for metrics (commonly called [[service level indicator]]s, SLIs). As an example, an availability SLO may be defined as the expected measured value of an availability SLI over a prescribed duration (
==Examples==
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{{reflist}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Service Level Objectives}}▼
[[Category:IT service management]]▼
[[Category:Outsourcing]]▼
▲==External Links==
* [https://sre.google/sre-book/service-level-objectives/ Service Level Objectives]
* [https://www.dynatrace.com/news/blog/what-are-slos/ What are SLOs? How service-level objectives work with SLIs to deliver on SLAs]
* [https://www.atlassian.com/incident-management/kpis/sla-vs-slo-vs-sli SLA vs. SLO vs. SLI: What’s the difference?]
▲{{DEFAULTSORT:Service Level Objectives}}
▲[[Category:IT service management]]
▲[[Category:Outsourcing]]
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