Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Computer networks
Languages : en
Pages : 200
Book Description
Third Workshop on Workstation Operating Systems, April 23-24, 1992, Key Biscayne, Florida
Fourth Workshop on Workstation Operating System, October 14-15, 1993, Napa, California
Author:
Publisher: Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers(IEEE)
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 222
Book Description
Annotation Proceeding of the workshop held in Napa, California, in October 1993. Topics include mobile computing, memory management, networking, real time. No index. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
Publisher: Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers(IEEE)
ISBN:
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 222
Book Description
Annotation Proceeding of the workshop held in Napa, California, in October 1993. Topics include mobile computing, memory management, networking, real time. No index. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
Advances in Computer Systems Architecture
Author: Thambipillai Srikanthan
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 354032108X
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 850
Book Description
On behalf of the ProgramCommittee, we are pleased to present the proceedings of the 2005 Asia-Paci?c Computer Systems Architecture Conference (ACSAC 2005) held in the beautiful and dynamic country of Singapore. This conference was the tenth in its series, one of the leading forums for sharing the emerging research ?ndings in this ?eld. In consultation with the ACSAC Steering Committee, we selected a - member Program Committee. This Program Committee represented a broad spectrum of research expertise to ensure a good balance of research areas, - stitutions and experience while maintaining the high quality of this conference series. This year’s committee was of the same size as last year but had 19 new faces. We received a total of 173 submissions which is 14% more than last year. Each paper was assigned to at least three and in some cases four ProgramC- mittee members for review. Wherever necessary, the committee members called upon the expertise of their colleagues to ensure the highest possible quality in the reviewing process. As a result, we received 415 reviews from the Program Committee members and their 105 co-reviewers whose names are acknowledged inthe proceedings.Theconferencecommitteeadopteda systematicblind review process to provide a fair assessment of all submissions. In the end, we accepted 65 papers on a broad range of topics giving an acceptance rate of 37.5%. We are grateful to all the Program Committee members and the co-reviewers for their e?orts in completing the reviews within a tight schedule.
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 354032108X
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 850
Book Description
On behalf of the ProgramCommittee, we are pleased to present the proceedings of the 2005 Asia-Paci?c Computer Systems Architecture Conference (ACSAC 2005) held in the beautiful and dynamic country of Singapore. This conference was the tenth in its series, one of the leading forums for sharing the emerging research ?ndings in this ?eld. In consultation with the ACSAC Steering Committee, we selected a - member Program Committee. This Program Committee represented a broad spectrum of research expertise to ensure a good balance of research areas, - stitutions and experience while maintaining the high quality of this conference series. This year’s committee was of the same size as last year but had 19 new faces. We received a total of 173 submissions which is 14% more than last year. Each paper was assigned to at least three and in some cases four ProgramC- mittee members for review. Wherever necessary, the committee members called upon the expertise of their colleagues to ensure the highest possible quality in the reviewing process. As a result, we received 415 reviews from the Program Committee members and their 105 co-reviewers whose names are acknowledged inthe proceedings.Theconferencecommitteeadopteda systematicblind review process to provide a fair assessment of all submissions. In the end, we accepted 65 papers on a broad range of topics giving an acceptance rate of 37.5%. We are grateful to all the Program Committee members and the co-reviewers for their e?orts in completing the reviews within a tight schedule.
High Performance Computing
Author: Amanda Bienz
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 3031408438
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 677
Book Description
This volume constitutes the papers of several workshops which were held in conjunction with the 38th International Conference on High Performance Computing, ISC High Performance 2023, held in Hamburg, Germany, during May 21–25, 2023. The 49 revised full papers presented in this book were carefully reviewed and selected from 70 submissions. ISC High Performance 2023 presents the following workshops: 2nd International Workshop on Malleability Techniques Applications in High-Performance Computing (HPCMALL) 18th Workshop on Virtualization in High-Performance Cloud Computing (VHPC 23) HPC I/O in the Data Center (HPC IODC) Workshop on Converged Computing of Cloud, HPC, and Edge (WOCC’23) 7th International Workshop on In Situ Visualization (WOIV’23) Workshop on Monitoring and Operational Data Analytics (MODA23) 2nd Workshop on Communication, I/O, and Storage at Scale on Next-Generation Platforms: Scalable Infrastructures First International Workshop on RISC-V for HPC Second Combined Workshop on Interactive and Urgent Supercomputing (CWIUS) HPC on Heterogeneous Hardware (H3)
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 3031408438
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 677
Book Description
This volume constitutes the papers of several workshops which were held in conjunction with the 38th International Conference on High Performance Computing, ISC High Performance 2023, held in Hamburg, Germany, during May 21–25, 2023. The 49 revised full papers presented in this book were carefully reviewed and selected from 70 submissions. ISC High Performance 2023 presents the following workshops: 2nd International Workshop on Malleability Techniques Applications in High-Performance Computing (HPCMALL) 18th Workshop on Virtualization in High-Performance Cloud Computing (VHPC 23) HPC I/O in the Data Center (HPC IODC) Workshop on Converged Computing of Cloud, HPC, and Edge (WOCC’23) 7th International Workshop on In Situ Visualization (WOIV’23) Workshop on Monitoring and Operational Data Analytics (MODA23) 2nd Workshop on Communication, I/O, and Storage at Scale on Next-Generation Platforms: Scalable Infrastructures First International Workshop on RISC-V for HPC Second Combined Workshop on Interactive and Urgent Supercomputing (CWIUS) HPC on Heterogeneous Hardware (H3)
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems, April 14-16, 1992, Taipei, Taiwan
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780818627552
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 444
Book Description
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems, Taipei, Taiwan, April 1992. Papers touch such matters as architecture, modelling, programming, high speed networking, software engineering, fault-tolerant distributed systems and networks, multimedia. No index. Acid
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780818627552
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 444
Book Description
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems, Taipei, Taiwan, April 1992. Papers touch such matters as architecture, modelling, programming, high speed networking, software engineering, fault-tolerant distributed systems and networks, multimedia. No index. Acid
Proceedings of the 2nd Workshop on Industrial Experiences with Systems Software (WIESS '02)
Proceedings
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Computer storage devices
Languages : en
Pages : 328
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Computer storage devices
Languages : en
Pages : 328
Book Description
Real-Time and Embedded Computing Systems and Applications
Author: Jing Chen
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 354024686X
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 634
Book Description
This volume contains the 37 papers presented at the 9th International Con- rence on Real-Time and Embedded Computing Systems and Applications (RT- CSA 2003). RTCSA is an international conference organized for scientists and researchers from both academia and industry to hold intensive discussions on advancing technologies topics on real-time systems, embedded systems, ubiq- tous/pervasive computing, and related topics. RTCSA 2003 was held at the Department of Electrical Engineering of National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan. Paper submissions were well distributed over the various aspects of real-time computing and embedded system technologies. There were more than 100 participants from all over the world. The papers, including 28 regular papers and 9 short papers are grouped into thecategoriesofscheduling,networkingandcommunication,embeddedsystems, pervasive/ubiquitous computing, systems and architectures, resource mana- ment, ?le systems and databases, performance analysis, and tools and de- lopment. The grouping is basically in accordance with the conference program. Earlier versions of these papers were published in the conference proceedings. However, some papers in this volume have been modi?ed or improved by the authors, in various aspects, based on comments and feedback received at the conference. It is our sincere hope that researchers and developers will bene?t from these papers. We would like to thank all the authors of the papers for their contribution. We thank the members of the program committee and the reviewers for their excellent work in evaluating the submissions. We are also very grateful to all the members of the organizing committees for their help, guidance and support.
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 354024686X
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 634
Book Description
This volume contains the 37 papers presented at the 9th International Con- rence on Real-Time and Embedded Computing Systems and Applications (RT- CSA 2003). RTCSA is an international conference organized for scientists and researchers from both academia and industry to hold intensive discussions on advancing technologies topics on real-time systems, embedded systems, ubiq- tous/pervasive computing, and related topics. RTCSA 2003 was held at the Department of Electrical Engineering of National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan. Paper submissions were well distributed over the various aspects of real-time computing and embedded system technologies. There were more than 100 participants from all over the world. The papers, including 28 regular papers and 9 short papers are grouped into thecategoriesofscheduling,networkingandcommunication,embeddedsystems, pervasive/ubiquitous computing, systems and architectures, resource mana- ment, ?le systems and databases, performance analysis, and tools and de- lopment. The grouping is basically in accordance with the conference program. Earlier versions of these papers were published in the conference proceedings. However, some papers in this volume have been modi?ed or improved by the authors, in various aspects, based on comments and feedback received at the conference. It is our sincere hope that researchers and developers will bene?t from these papers. We would like to thank all the authors of the papers for their contribution. We thank the members of the program committee and the reviewers for their excellent work in evaluating the submissions. We are also very grateful to all the members of the organizing committees for their help, guidance and support.
Replicated Data Management for Mobile Computing
Author: Terry Douglas
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 303102477X
Category : Mathematics
Languages : en
Pages : 93
Book Description
Managing data in a mobile computing environment invariably involves caching or replication. In many cases, a mobile device has access only to data that is stored locally, and much of that data arrives via replication from other devices, PCs, and services. Given portable devices with limited resources, weak or intermittent connectivity, and security vulnerabilities, data replication serves to increase availability, reduce communication costs, foster sharing, and enhance survivability of critical information. Mobile systems have employed a variety of distributed architectures from client–server caching to peer-to-peer replication. Such systems generally provide weak consistency models in which read and update operations can be performed at any replica without coordination with other devices. The design of a replication protocol then centers on issues of how to record, propagate, order, and filter updates. Some protocols utilize operation logs, whereas others replicate state. Systems might provide best-effort delivery, using gossip protocols or multicast, or guarantee eventual consistency for arbitrary communication patterns, using recently developed pairwise, knowledge-driven protocols. Additionally, systems must detect and resolve the conflicts that arise from concurrent updates using techniques ranging from version vectors to read–write dependency checks. This lecture explores the choices faced in designing a replication protocol, with particular emphasis on meeting the needs of mobile applications. It presents the inherent trade-offs and implicit assumptions in alternative designs. The discussion is grounded by including case studies of research and commercial systems including Coda, Ficus, Bayou, Sybase’s iAnywhere, and Microsoft’s Sync Framework. Table of Contents: Introduction / System Models / Data Consistency / Replicated Data Protocols / Partial Replication / Conflict Management / Case Studies / Conclusions / Bibliography
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 303102477X
Category : Mathematics
Languages : en
Pages : 93
Book Description
Managing data in a mobile computing environment invariably involves caching or replication. In many cases, a mobile device has access only to data that is stored locally, and much of that data arrives via replication from other devices, PCs, and services. Given portable devices with limited resources, weak or intermittent connectivity, and security vulnerabilities, data replication serves to increase availability, reduce communication costs, foster sharing, and enhance survivability of critical information. Mobile systems have employed a variety of distributed architectures from client–server caching to peer-to-peer replication. Such systems generally provide weak consistency models in which read and update operations can be performed at any replica without coordination with other devices. The design of a replication protocol then centers on issues of how to record, propagate, order, and filter updates. Some protocols utilize operation logs, whereas others replicate state. Systems might provide best-effort delivery, using gossip protocols or multicast, or guarantee eventual consistency for arbitrary communication patterns, using recently developed pairwise, knowledge-driven protocols. Additionally, systems must detect and resolve the conflicts that arise from concurrent updates using techniques ranging from version vectors to read–write dependency checks. This lecture explores the choices faced in designing a replication protocol, with particular emphasis on meeting the needs of mobile applications. It presents the inherent trade-offs and implicit assumptions in alternative designs. The discussion is grounded by including case studies of research and commercial systems including Coda, Ficus, Bayou, Sybase’s iAnywhere, and Microsoft’s Sync Framework. Table of Contents: Introduction / System Models / Data Consistency / Replicated Data Protocols / Partial Replication / Conflict Management / Case Studies / Conclusions / Bibliography
Performance Benchmarking of Application Monitoring Frameworks
Author: Jan Waller
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
ISBN: 3735778534
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 374
Book Description
Application-level monitoring of continuously operating software systems provides insights into their dynamic behavior, helping to maintain their performance and availability during runtime. Such monitoring may cause a significant runtime overhead to the monitored system, depending on the number and location of used instrumentation probes. In order to improve a system’s instrumentation and to reduce the caused monitoring overhead, it is necessary to know the performance impact of each probe. While many monitoring frameworks are claiming to have minimal impact on the performance, these claims are often not backed up with a detailed performance evaluation determining the actual cost of monitoring. Benchmarks can be used as an effective and affordable way for these evaluations. However, no benchmark specifically targeting the overhead of monitoring itself exists. Furthermore, no established benchmark engineering methodology exists that provides guidelines for the design, execution, and analysis of benchmarks. This thesis introduces a benchmark approach to measure the performance overhead of application-level monitoring frameworks. The core contributions of this approach are 1) a definition of common causes of monitoring overhead, 2) a general benchmark engineering methodology, 3) the MooBench micro-benchmark to measure and quantify causes of monitoring overhead, and 4) detailed performance evaluations of three different application-level monitoring frameworks. Extensive experiments demonstrate the feasibility and practicality of the approach and validate the benchmark results. The developed benchmark is available as open source software and the results of all experiments are available for download to facilitate further validation and replication of the results.
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
ISBN: 3735778534
Category : Computers
Languages : en
Pages : 374
Book Description
Application-level monitoring of continuously operating software systems provides insights into their dynamic behavior, helping to maintain their performance and availability during runtime. Such monitoring may cause a significant runtime overhead to the monitored system, depending on the number and location of used instrumentation probes. In order to improve a system’s instrumentation and to reduce the caused monitoring overhead, it is necessary to know the performance impact of each probe. While many monitoring frameworks are claiming to have minimal impact on the performance, these claims are often not backed up with a detailed performance evaluation determining the actual cost of monitoring. Benchmarks can be used as an effective and affordable way for these evaluations. However, no benchmark specifically targeting the overhead of monitoring itself exists. Furthermore, no established benchmark engineering methodology exists that provides guidelines for the design, execution, and analysis of benchmarks. This thesis introduces a benchmark approach to measure the performance overhead of application-level monitoring frameworks. The core contributions of this approach are 1) a definition of common causes of monitoring overhead, 2) a general benchmark engineering methodology, 3) the MooBench micro-benchmark to measure and quantify causes of monitoring overhead, and 4) detailed performance evaluations of three different application-level monitoring frameworks. Extensive experiments demonstrate the feasibility and practicality of the approach and validate the benchmark results. The developed benchmark is available as open source software and the results of all experiments are available for download to facilitate further validation and replication of the results.