Proceedings of the fifth IFIP/IEEE international symposium on Integrated network management V : integrated management in a virtual world: integrated management in a virtual world
Experiences on Integration of Network Management and a Distributed Computing Platform
HICSS '97 Proceedings of the 30th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences: Software Technology and Architecture - Volume 1
A Framework for Evaluating Distributed Object Models and its Application to Web Engineering
Annals of Software Engineering
Distributed Network Management Using SNMP, Java, WWW and CORBA
Journal of Network and Systems Management
An Open Secure Mobile Agent Framework for SystemsManagement
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Monitoring Network QoS in a Dynamic Real-Time System
IPDPS '02 Proceedings of the 16th International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium
A model for parallel programming over CORBA
Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing
An architecture for web based and distributed telecommunication network management system
IITA'09 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Intelligent information technology application
Protocols and architecture for managing TCP/IP network infrastructures
Computer Communications
Hi-index | 4.10 |
Systems to manage distributed heterogeneous networks and services must often use off-the-shelf components and leverage legacy applications. Much of the telecommunications industry uses a network architecture based on CMIP (Common Management Information Protocol) to manage networks and services, while much of the Internet uses the SNMP (Simple Net work Management Protocol). To provide distributed network management, the telecommunications industry must accommodate both. Nokia developed the Distributed Computing Platform prototype to support the creation, management, and invocation of distributed telecommunications services. Using CORBA as a base, DCP handles network management by adding managed-object models and protocols. It provides mechanisms that allow communication between CMIP-based objects and a gateway for SNMP-based systems. The prototype also allows users to access network information via Web browsers, CGI gateways, and Java or HTTP daemons. The Nokia engineers also discuss the lessons they learned about Java and CORBA integration.