Closure and Convergence: A Foundation of Fault-Tolerant Computing
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering - Special issue on software reliability
Fault-containing self-stabilizing algorithms
PODC '96 Proceedings of the fifteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Self-stabilization
Self-stabilizing systems in spite of distributed control
Communications of the ACM
Efficient Content-Based Event Dispatching in the Presence of Topological Reconfiguration
ICDCS '03 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
A peer-to-peer approach to content-based publish/subscribe
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Distributed event-based systems
Peer-to-peer overlay broker networks in an event-based middleware
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Distributed event-based systems
Introducing reliability in content-based publish-subscribe through epidemic algorithms
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Distributed event-based systems
Minimizing the reconfiguration overhead in content-based publish-subscribe
Proceedings of the 2004 ACM symposium on Applied computing
Content-Based Publish-Subscribe over Structured Overlay Networks
ICDCS '05 Proceedings of the 25th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
CMS-ToPSS: efficient dissemination of RSS documents
VLDB '05 Proceedings of the 31st international conference on Very large data bases
MASCOTS '05 Proceedings of the 13th IEEE International Symposium on Modeling, Analysis, and Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems
Self-stabilizing publish/subscribe systems: algorithms and evaluation
Euro-Par'05 Proceedings of the 11th international Euro-Par conference on Parallel Processing
FeedTree: sharing web micronews with peer-to-peer event notification
IPTPS'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Redirection policies for mission-based information sharing
Proceedings of the eleventh ACM symposium on Access control models and technologies
Adapting publish-subscribe routing to traffic demands
Proceedings of the 2007 inaugural international conference on Distributed event-based systems
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The increasing availability of broadband Internet access coming along with cheap flatrate tariffs changed the way the Internet is used over the last years. As a result, we observe more users that become producers and collaborate instead of solely consuming information as they did before. Besides that, the Internet has become a tool for daily use and information dissemination. As push-based information services are heavily needed for collaboration and information dissemination, it seems like the breakthrough of distributed push publish/subscribe on the open Internet is just imminent today, although research has been around already for many years now. One reason why most publish/subscribe applications are still based on a rather basic centralized mechanism and not on a distributed scalable notification service, as it is commonly proposed in state-of-the-art publish/subscribe systems in research, is the unsolved management issue.This extended research abstracts is intended to give an overview of my Ph.D. project on self-organizing publish/subscribe, where I want to tackle management issues for better applicability. After giving an introduction to the pub/sub communication paradigm and motivating the necessity to make such systems self-organizing, I will point out the contributions of my work. They are centered around making publish/subscribe systems self-stabilizing and adaptive by means of self-organizing mechanisms. While my work on self-stabilization is nearly finished, introducing adaptivity by self-organization is still in an early stage.