Fourth Workshop on Workstation Operating System, October 14-15, 1993, Napa, California


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.




Proceedings


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Replicated Data Management for Mobile Computing


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







Input-output Performance Evaluation


Book Description

This dissertation's self-scaling benchmark seeks to measure and report relevant workloads for a wide range of input/output systems. To do so, it scales aspects of its workload to account for the differences in I/O systems. For example, it dynamically discovers the size of the system's file cache and reports how performance varies both in and out of the file cache. The general approach taken is to scale based on the range of workloads the system performs well.




American Book Publishing Record Cumulative 1993


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Cited in BCL3, Sheehy, and Walford . Compiled from the 12 monthly issues of the ABPR, this edition of the annual cumulation lists by Dewey sequence some 41,700 titles for books published or distributed in the US. Entry information is derived from MARC II tapes and books submitted to R.R. Bowker, an




Report


Book Description