1,804 research outputs found

    DIAMOnDS - DIstributed Agents for MObile & Dynamic Services

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    Distributed Services Architecture with support for mobile agents between services, offer significantly improved communication and computational flexibility. The uses of agents allow execution of complex operations that involve large amounts of data to be processed effectively using distributed resources. The prototype system Distributed Agents for Mobile and Dynamic Services (DIAMOnDS), allows a service to send agents on its behalf, to other services, to perform data manipulation and processing. Agents have been implemented as mobile services that are discovered using the Jini Lookup mechanism and used by other services for task management and communication. Agents provide proxies for interaction with other services as well as specific GUI to monitor and control the agent activity. Thus agents acting on behalf of one service cooperate with other services to carry out a job, providing inter-operation of loosely coupled services in a semi-autonomous way. Remote file system access functionality has been incorporated by the agent framework and allows services to dynamically share and browse the file system resources of hosts, running the services. Generic database access functionality has been implemented in the mobile agent framework that allows performing complex data mining and processing operations efficiently in distributed system. A basic data searching agent is also implemented that performs a query based search in a file system. The testing of the framework was carried out on WAN by moving Connectivity Test agents between AgentStations in CERN, Switzerland and NUST, Pakistan.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, CHEP03, La Jolla, California, March 24-28, 200

    Forum Session at the First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC03)

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    The First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC) was held in Trento, December 15-18, 2003. The focus of the conference ---Service Oriented Computing (SOC)--- is the new emerging paradigm for distributed computing and e-business processing that has evolved from object-oriented and component computing to enable building agile networks of collaborating business applications distributed within and across organizational boundaries. Of the 181 papers submitted to the ICSOC conference, 10 were selected for the forum session which took place on December the 16th, 2003. The papers were chosen based on their technical quality, originality, relevance to SOC and for their nature of being best suited for a poster presentation or a demonstration. This technical report contains the 10 papers presented during the forum session at the ICSOC conference. In particular, the last two papers in the report ere submitted as industrial papers

    A Methodology for Engineering Collaborative and ad-hoc Mobile Applications using SyD Middleware

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    Today’s web applications are more collaborative and utilize standard and ubiquitous Internet protocols. We have earlier developed System on Mobile Devices (SyD) middleware to rapidly develop and deploy collaborative applications over heterogeneous and possibly mobile devices hosting web objects. In this paper, we present the software engineering methodology for developing SyD-enabled web applications and illustrate it through a case study on two representative applications: (i) a calendar of meeting application, which is a collaborative application and (ii) a travel application which is an ad-hoc collaborative application. SyD-enabled web objects allow us to create a collaborative application rapidly with limited coding effort. In this case study, the modular software architecture allowed us to hide the inherent heterogeneity among devices, data stores, and networks by presenting a uniform and persistent object view of mobile objects interacting through XML/SOAP requests and responses. The performance results we obtained show that the application scales well as we increase the group size and adapts well within the constraints of mobile devices

    A real-time distributed analysis automation for hurricane surface wind observations

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    From 1993 until 1999, the Hurricane Research Division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) produced real-time analyses of surface wind observations to help determine a storm\u27s wind intensity and extent. Limitations of the real-time analysis system included platform and filesystem dependency, lacking data integrity and feasibility for Internet deployment. In 2000, a new system was developed, built upon a Java prototype of a quality control graphical client interface for wind observations and an object-relational database. The objective was to integrate them in a distributed object approach with the legacy code responsible for the actual real-time wind analysis and image product generation. Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) was evaluated, but Java Remote Method Invocation (AMI) offered important advantages in terms of reuse and deployment. Even more substantial, though, were the efforts towards object-oriented redesign, implementation and testing of the quality control interface and its database performance interaction. As a result, a full-featured application can now be launched from the Web, potentially accessible by tropical cyclone forecast and warning centers worldwide

    Analysis of current middleware used in peer-to-peer and grid implementations for enhancement by catallactic mechanisms

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    This deliverable describes the work done in task 3.1, Middleware analysis: Analysis of current middleware used in peer-to-peer and grid implementations for enhancement by catallactic mechanisms from work package 3, Middleware Implementation. The document is divided in four parts: The introduction with application scenarios and middleware requirements, Catnets middleware architecture, evaluation of existing middleware toolkits, and conclusions. -- Die Arbeit definiert Anforderungen an Grid und Peer-to-Peer Middleware Architekturen und analysiert diese auf ihre Eignung fĂĽr die prototypische Umsetzung der Katallaxie. Eine Middleware-Architektur fĂĽr die Umsetzung der Katallaxie in Application Layer Netzwerken wird vorgestellt.Grid Computing

    Mobile Restaurant- An advanced food ordering service via handheld devices

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    Handheld devices provide a means for customers to place and pay for orders on-the-fly in nowadays m-commerce generation. Therefore, the aim of this project is to develop a system that has capability in handling the food ordering service in Universiti Teknologi Petronas (UTP) with the use ofhandheld devices. Currently, the food services in campus are not efficient enough in which customers usually have to wait long time for the food to be prepared when they enter the cafeteria. In addition, customers do not have chance to know in advance the type of food will be available until they physically reach the restaurant. A system targeting on mobile devices is developed to overcome the limitations of the current services - Mobile Restaurant. In chapter 3, author will discuss about the methodology used to develop the system, which is waterfall model consists of five phases: requirement definition, system & software design, implementation &unit testing, integration &system testing, and operation &maintenance. The system prototype consists of three sub systems, which are client application implemented in mobile devices, a SMS notification service, and the web-based service administration. Chapter 4 will introduce the volume of work has been done and discuss on some issues for the implementation ofthe system. The first two sub systems had been completed and tested. The third sub system is under development for future enhancement. As in conclusion, the scope ofthe project has been successfully achieved and it provides a sophisticated system to enhance the restaurant's production and food on time delivery process.

    Proof-of-Concept Application - Annual Report Year 2

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    This document first gives an introduction to Application Layer Networks and subsequently presents the catallactic resource allocation model and its integration into the middleware architecture of the developed prototype. Furthermore use cases for employed service models in such scenarios are presented as general application scenarios as well as two very detailed cases: Query services and Data Mining services. This work concludes by describing the middleware implementation and evaluation as well as future work in this area. --Grid Computing
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