UNIX system V: streams programmer's guide
UNIX system V: streams programmer's guide
Architectural directions for opening IBM networks: the case of OSI
IBM Systems Journal
USTC'94 Proceedings of the USENIX Summer 1994 Technical Conference on USENIX Summer 1994 Technical Conference - Volume 1
UML classes diagrams and agent-based systems
Proceedings of the fifth international conference on Autonomous agents
Interaction patterns and observable commitments in a multi-agent trading scenario
Proceedings of the fifth international conference on Autonomous agents
Agent-Oriented Modelling: Software versus the World
AOSE '01 Revised Papers and Invited Contributions from the Second International Workshop on Agent-Oriented Software Engineering II
UML Class Diagrams Revisited in the Context of Agent-Based Systems
AOSE '01 Revised Papers and Invited Contributions from the Second International Workshop on Agent-Oriented Software Engineering II
Normative Communication Models for Agent
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Extending agent UML sequence diagrams
AOSE'02 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Agent-oriented software engineering III
The behavior-oriented design of modular agent intelligence
NODe'02 Proceedings of the NODe 2002 agent-related conference on Agent technologies, infrastructures, tools, and applications for E-services
A novel formal specification approach for real time multi-agent system functional requirements
MATES'10 Proceedings of the 8th German conference on Multiagent system technologies
Toward a suite of performatives based upon joint intention theory
AC'04 Proceedings of the 2004 international conference on Agent Communication
Specifying and solving symbolic and numeric temporal constraints
International Journal of Knowledge-based and Intelligent Engineering Systems
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Abstract: Multiprotocol systems can be an important tool for achieving interoperability. As the number of protocols available on such systems grows, there is an increasing need for support mechanisms that enable users to effectively access these protocols. Of particular importance is the need to determine which of several protocols to use for a given communication task. In this work, we propose architectures for a protocol discovery system that uses protocol feedback mechanisms to determine which protocols are supported. We describe the issues related to protocol discovery and present feedback mechanisms necessary to support discovery. We present a prototype implementation of a discovery system that supports multiple protocols.