Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/jspui/handle/123456789/11339
Title: A general-purpose distributed computing Java middleware.
Authors: Almeida, André Luís Barroso de
Cimino, Leonardo de Souza
Resende, José Estevão Eugênio de
Silva, Lucas Henrique Moreira
Rocha, Samuel Queiroz Souza
Gregorio, Guilherme Aparecido
Paiva, Gustavo Silva
Silva, Saul Emanuel Delabrida
Santos, Haroldo Gambini
Carvalho, Marco Antonio Moreira de
Aquino, André Luiz Lins de
Lima, Joubert de Castro
Keywords: Distributed shared memory
Parallel computing
Task-oriented
Issue Date: 2019
Citation: ALMEIDA, A. L. B. de et al. A general-purpose distributed computing Java middleware. Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience, v. 31, n. 7, p. e4967, abr. 2019. Disponível em: <https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cpe.4967>. Acesso em: 19 mar. 2019.
Abstract: The middleware solutions for General‐Purpose Distributed Computing (GPDC) have distinct requirements, such as task scheduling, processing/storage fault tolerance, code portability for parallel or distributed environments, simple deployment (including over grid or multi‐cluster environments), collaborative development, low code refactoring, native support for distributed data structures, asynchronous task execution, and support for distributed global variables. These solutions do not integrate these requirements into a single deployment with a unique API exposing most of these requirements to users. The consequence is the utilization of several solutions with their particularities, thus requiring different user skills. Besides that, the users have to solve the integration and all heterogeneity issues. To reduce this integration gap, in this paper, we present Java Cá&Lá (JCL), a distributed‐shared‐memory and task‐oriented lightweight middleware for the Java community that separates business logic from distribution issues during the development process and incorporates several requirements that were presented separately in the GPDC middleware literature over the last few decades. JCL allows building distributed or parallel applications with only a few portable API calls, thus reducing the integration problems. Finally, it also runs on different platforms, including small single‐board computers. This work compares and contrasts JCL with other Java middleware systems and reports experimental evaluations of JCL applications in several distinct scenarios.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/handle/123456789/11339
metadata.dc.identifier.uri2: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/cpe.4967
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.4967
ISSN: 1532-0634
Appears in Collections:DECOM - Artigos publicados em periódicos

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