<p>Middleware is everywhere. Ever since the advent of sockets and other virtu- circuit abstractions, researchers have been looking for ways to incorporate high- value concepts into distributed systems platforms. Most distributed applications, especially Internet applications, are now programmed usin
Middleware 2000: IFIP/ACM International Conference on Distributed Systems Platforms and Open Distributed Processing New York, NY, USA, April 4β7, 2000 Proceedings
β Scribed by Gregory V. Chockler, Danny Dolev, Roy Friedman, Roman Vitenberg (auth.), Joseph Sventek, Geoffrey Coulson (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 447
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1795
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Middleware is everywhere. Ever since the advent of sockets and other virtu- circuit abstractions, researchers have been looking for ways to incorporate high- value concepts into distributed systems platforms. Most distributed applications, especially Internet applications, are now programmed using such middleware platforms. Prior to 1998, there were several major conferences and workshops at which research into middleware was reported, including ICODP (International C- ference on Open Distributed Processing), ICDP (International Conference on Distributed Platforms) and SDNE (Services in Distributed and Networked - vironments). Middlewareβ98was a synthesis of these three conferences. Middleware 2000 continued the excellent tradition of Middlewareβ98. It p- vided a single venue for reporting state-of-the-art results in the provision of distributed systems platforms. The focus of Middleware 2000 was the design, implementation, deployment, and evaluation of distributed systems platforms and architectures for future networked environments. Among the 70 initial submissions to Middleware 2000, 21 papers were - lected for inclusion in the technical program of the conference. Every paper was reviewed by four members of the program committee. The papers were judged - cording to their originality, presentation quality, and relevance to the conference topics. The accepted papers cover various subjects such as caching, re?ection, quality of service, and transactions.
β¦ Table of Contents
Implementing a Caching Service for Distributed CORBA Objects....Pages 1-23
A Middleware System Which Intelligently Caches Query Results....Pages 24-44
Distributed Object Implementations for Interactive Applications....Pages 45-70
MIMO β An Infrastructure for Monitoring and Managing Distributed Middleware Environments....Pages 71-87
Gateways for Accessing Fault Tolerance Domains....Pages 88-103
An Architecture for Distributed OASIS Services....Pages 104-120
Monitoring, Security, and Dynamic Configuration with the dynamicTAO Reflective ORB....Pages 121-143
Customization of Object Request Brokers by Application Specific Policies....Pages 144-163
The Role of Software Architecture in Constraining Adaptation in Component-Based Middleware Platforms....Pages 164-184
Exploiting IP Multicast in Content-Based Publish-Subscribe Systems....Pages 185-207
The Design and Performance of a Scalable ORB Architecture for CORBA Asynchronous Messaging....Pages 208-230
A Publish/Subscribe CORBA Persistent State Service Prototype....Pages 231-255
QualProbes: Middleware QoS Profiling Services for Configuring Adaptive Applications....Pages 256-272
Structuring QoS-Supporting Services with Smart Proxies....Pages 273-288
Trading and Negotiating Stream Bindings....Pages 289-307
Strategies for Integrating Messaging and Distributed Object Transactions....Pages 308-330
A Distributed Object Oriented Framework to Offer Transactional Support for Long Running Business Processes....Pages 331-348
Active Middleware Services in a Decision Support System for Managing Highly Available Distributed Resources....Pages 349-371
The Design and Performance of a Pluggable Protocols Framework for Real-Time Distributed Object Computing Middleware....Pages 372-395
Customizing IDL Mappings and ORB Protocols....Pages 396-414
Hierarchical Architecture for Real-Time Adaptive Resource Management....Pages 415-434
β¦ Subjects
Computer Communication Networks; Operating Systems; Programming Techniques; Software Engineering; Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters
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