7,935 research outputs found
The development of a mapping tool for the evaluation of building systems for future climate scenarios on European scale
The paper presents a tool for the mapping of the performance of building
systems on European scale for different (future) time periods. The tool is to
use for users and be applicable for different building systems. Users should
also be able to use a broad range of climate parameters to assess the influence
of climate change on these climatic parameters. Also should the calculation
time be reasonable short. The mapping tool is developed in MATLAB, which can be
used by other users for their own studies.Comment: 21 pages, 24 figures, pre-conferenc
Achieving scalability in hierarchical location services
Services for locating mobile objects are often organized as a distributed search tree. A potential problem with this organization is that high-level nodes may become a bottleneck, affecting the scalability of the service. A traditional approach to handle such problems is to also distribute the location information managed by a single node across multiple machines
Scheduling concurrent rpcs in the globe location service
Globe is a wide-area distributed system in which an object can be located through its location-independent identifier. This is done by means of a worldwide location service. In contrast to comparable services, the approach that is followed in Globe allows objects to be highly mobile, replicated, or physically distributed. In addition, our algorithms adapt dynamically to an object’s behavior, resulting in an efficient and above all, scalable approach. The algorithms for updating and looking up an object’s location are expressed as high-level operations on a worldwide search tree. We have designed and implemented a middleware layer providing all the necessary network communication. In this paper, we show that such a layer hardly introduces any additional overhead. The important consequence is that our location service can be designed and implemented at a high level of abstraction. Compared to the design and implementation of comparable worldwide services, this approach is quite unique
A comparison of graphical design techniques for parallel, distributed software
We have compared three graphical design techniques, OMT, ADL, and PARSE, on their
suitability for the development of parallel/distributed applications. Our method has been to use all three of them in modeling one, existing, application: a backup facility running
within the Andrew File System. We compare and analyze the outcomes on a number of important design aspects. Based on this, we draw conclusions on each individual technique
and on graphical design techniques for parallel/distributed software in general
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