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Advances in Distributed Systems [electronic resource] : Advanced Distributed Computing: From Algorithms to Systems /

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 1752Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2000Edition: 1st ed. 2000Description: VIII, 516 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540464754
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 004.0151 23
LOC classification:
  • QA75.5-76.95
Online resources:
Contents:
1 Distributed Algorithms -- Time in Distributed System Models and Algorithms -- Consensus in Asynchronous Distributed Systems: A Concise Guided Tour -- Group Communication in Partitionable Distributed Systems -- Enhancing Replica Management Services to Cope with Group Failures -- Recent Advances in Distributed Garbage Collection -- Topology-Aware Algorithms for Large-Scale Communication -- 2 Systems Architecture -- Responsive Protocols for Distributed Multimedia Applications? -- Programming Partition-Aware Network Applications? -- Deploying Distributed Objects on the Internet -- Integrating Group Communication with Transactions for Implementing Persistent Replicated Objects -- Replication of CORBA Objects -- Constructing Dependable Web Services -- 3 Applications Support -- Support for Distributed CSCW Applications -- Component-Based Programming of Distributed Applications -- OPENflow: A CORBA Based Transactional Workflow System -- Improving the Effectiveness of Web Caching -- Mobility and Coordination for Distributed Java Applications -- 4 Case Studies -- PerDiS: Design, Implementation, and Use of a PERsistent DIstributed Store -- The University Student Registration System: A Case Study in Building a High-Availability Distributed Application Using General Purpose Components -- Quality of Service and Electronic Newspaper: The Etel Solution -- FlexiNet: A Flexible, Component-Oriented Middleware System.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: In 1992 we initiated a research project on large scale distributed computing systems (LSDCS). It was a collaborative project involving research institutes and universities in Bologna, Grenoble, Lausanne, Lisbon, Rennes, Rocquencourt, Newcastle, and Twente. The World Wide Web had recently been developed at CERN, but its use was not yet as common place as it is today and graphical browsers had yet to be developed. It was clear to us (and to just about everyone else) that LSDCS comprising several thousands to millions of individual computer systems (nodes) would be coming into existence as a consequence both of technological advances and the demands placed by applications. We were excited about the problems of building large distributed systems, and felt that serious rethinking of many of the existing computational paradigms, algorithms, and structuring principles for distributed computing was called for. In our research proposal, we summarized the problem domain as follows: “We expect LSDCS to exhibit great diversity of node and communications capability. Nodes will range from (mobile) laptop computers, workstations to supercomputers. Whereas mobile computers may well have unreliable, low bandwidth communications to the rest of the system, other parts of the system may well possess high bandwidth communications capability. To appreciate the problems posed by the sheer scale of a system comprising thousands of nodes, we observe that such systems will be rarely functioning in their entirety.
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1 Distributed Algorithms -- Time in Distributed System Models and Algorithms -- Consensus in Asynchronous Distributed Systems: A Concise Guided Tour -- Group Communication in Partitionable Distributed Systems -- Enhancing Replica Management Services to Cope with Group Failures -- Recent Advances in Distributed Garbage Collection -- Topology-Aware Algorithms for Large-Scale Communication -- 2 Systems Architecture -- Responsive Protocols for Distributed Multimedia Applications? -- Programming Partition-Aware Network Applications? -- Deploying Distributed Objects on the Internet -- Integrating Group Communication with Transactions for Implementing Persistent Replicated Objects -- Replication of CORBA Objects -- Constructing Dependable Web Services -- 3 Applications Support -- Support for Distributed CSCW Applications -- Component-Based Programming of Distributed Applications -- OPENflow: A CORBA Based Transactional Workflow System -- Improving the Effectiveness of Web Caching -- Mobility and Coordination for Distributed Java Applications -- 4 Case Studies -- PerDiS: Design, Implementation, and Use of a PERsistent DIstributed Store -- The University Student Registration System: A Case Study in Building a High-Availability Distributed Application Using General Purpose Components -- Quality of Service and Electronic Newspaper: The Etel Solution -- FlexiNet: A Flexible, Component-Oriented Middleware System.

In 1992 we initiated a research project on large scale distributed computing systems (LSDCS). It was a collaborative project involving research institutes and universities in Bologna, Grenoble, Lausanne, Lisbon, Rennes, Rocquencourt, Newcastle, and Twente. The World Wide Web had recently been developed at CERN, but its use was not yet as common place as it is today and graphical browsers had yet to be developed. It was clear to us (and to just about everyone else) that LSDCS comprising several thousands to millions of individual computer systems (nodes) would be coming into existence as a consequence both of technological advances and the demands placed by applications. We were excited about the problems of building large distributed systems, and felt that serious rethinking of many of the existing computational paradigms, algorithms, and structuring principles for distributed computing was called for. In our research proposal, we summarized the problem domain as follows: “We expect LSDCS to exhibit great diversity of node and communications capability. Nodes will range from (mobile) laptop computers, workstations to supercomputers. Whereas mobile computers may well have unreliable, low bandwidth communications to the rest of the system, other parts of the system may well possess high bandwidth communications capability. To appreciate the problems posed by the sheer scale of a system comprising thousands of nodes, we observe that such systems will be rarely functioning in their entirety.

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