Application Programming Interface for WOSP/WOSRP
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
Using Corba in the Web Operating System
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
Intensional High Performance Computing
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
A Resource Classification System for the WOS
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
Using Jini to Integrate Home Automation in a Distributed Software-System
DCW '02 Revised Papers from the 4th International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
Message Chains and Disjunct Paths for Increasing Communication Performance in Large Networks
DCW '00 Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Distributed Communities on the Web
Towards a Peer-To-Peer Platform for High Performance Computing
HPCASIA '05 Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on High-Performance Computing in Asia-Pacific Region
A scheduling algorithm for high performance peer-to-peer platform
Euro-Par'06 Proceedings of the CoreGRID 2006, UNICORE Summit 2006, Petascale Computational Biology and Bioinformatics conference on Parallel processing
A large scale distributed platform for high performance computing
GCC'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Grid and Cooperative Computing
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The World-Wide Web consists not only of informational, but also computational resources. However, these resources, especially computational ones are underutilized. One characteristic of theWeb is its ever changing structure; for instance, nodes are dynamically added and removed. This makes it difficult, if not impossible, to draw a complete and accurate picture of available resources. We consider the Web as a versioned system: resources, services and protocols are versioned. This paper presents a two-level protocol within this framework. The first protocol, the WOS Request Protocol (WOSRP), allows to select an appropriate version of a server. The second protocol, the WOS Protocol (WOSP), allows for locating and using these distributed (informational and computational) resources. We show how the latter protocol provides an efficient fault-tolerant resource search mechanism.