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10th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC-10 '01)
Location Selection for Active Services
San Francisco, California
August 07-August 09
ISBN: 0-7695-1296-8
Roger Karrer, ETH Z?
Abstract: Active services are application-specified programs that are executed inside the network. The location where the active service is executed plays an important role. The dynamic behavior of networks requires that the selection of the most suitable location to instantiate a service is done at run time. To dynamically place an active service, information about the network (topology, bandwidth) and application (type of the service) is necessary. This paper describes a method to dynamically search for available active service locations in the Internet. To be deployed in the current Internet, a solution is required to (i) scale well to large networks, (ii) to demand as little changes to the Internet as possible, especially not at lower network layers. Finally, the solution must be flexible and customizable to take application requirements into account. The proposed solution makes use of the routing path between two endsystems. Active service locations that are located close to the routing path are then found via DNS queries. The evaluation shows that the application pays an overhead at startup time. For applications that can tolerate a startup delay, we show with two experiments using a video application that the quality of the application can be increased by dynamic placement of active services.
Citation:
Roger Karrer, Thomas R. Gross, "Location Selection for Active Services," hpdc, pp.0195, 10th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC-10 '01), 2001
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