Agent design patterns: elements of agent application design
AGENTS '98 Proceedings of the second international conference on Autonomous agents
J-Kernel: a capability-based operating system for Java
Secure Internet programming
The Art of the Metaobject Protocol
The Art of the Metaobject Protocol
Aglets: Programming Mobile Agents in Java
WWCA '97 Proceedings of the International Conference on Worldwide Computing and Its Applications
Towards Fault-Tolerant and Secure Agentry
WDAG '97 Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Distributed Algorithms
Dynamic Adaptation of the Security Properties of Applications and Components
ECOOP '98 Workshop ion on Object-Oriented Technology
Security and Communication in Mobile Object Systems
MOS '96 Selected Presentations and Invited Papers Second International Workshop on Mobile Object Systems - Towards the Programmable Internet
The Messenger Environment MØ - A Condensed Description
MOS '96 Selected Presentations and Invited Papers Second International Workshop on Mobile Object Systems - Towards the Programmable Internet
Sumatra: A Language for Resource-Aware Mobile Programs
MOS '96 Selected Presentations and Invited Papers Second International Workshop on Mobile Object Systems - Towards the Programmable Internet
Operating system support for mobile agents
HOTOS '95 Proceedings of the Fifth Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems (HotOS-V)
A Reflective Model for Mobile Software Objects
ICDCS '97 Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS '97)
Agent Tcl: a flexible and secure mobile-agent system
TCLTK'96 Proceedings of the 4th conference on USENIX Tcl/Tk Workshop, 1996 - Volume 4
A Reflective Active Network Node
IWAN '00 Proceedings of the Second International Working Conference on Active Networks
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Mobile agents are usually expected to execute in open environments. This openness implies that they should be able to dynamically learn how to interact with other agents and services which were not known at development time. The interlocutors therefore have to publish enough information about their functionality, while at the same time they have to restrict access rights in order to preserve their integrity. We describe in this paper a messenger-based framework which proposes run-time generated interfaces to address this duality.