inria-00115569, version 2
DIET: New Developments and Recent Results
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N° RR-6027; RR-6027 (2006)
Abstract: Among existing grid middleware approaches, one simple, powerful, and flexible approach consists of using servers available in different administrative domains through the classic client-server or Remote Procedure Call (RPC) paradigm. Network Enabled Servers (NES) implement this model also called GridRPC. Clients submit computation requests to a scheduler whose goal is to find a server available on the grid. The aim of this paper is to give an overview of an NES middleware developed in the GRAAL team called DIET and to describe recent developments. DIET (Distributed Interactive Engineering Toolbox) is a hierarchical set of components used for the development of applications based on computational servers on the grid.
- a – Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon - ENS Lyon
- 1:
- Université de Lyon – CNRS : UMR5668 – INRIA – École Normale Supérieure - Lyon – Université Claude Bernard - Lyon I
- 2:
- CNRS : UMR5668 – INRIA – École Normale Supérieure - Lyon – Université Claude Bernard - Lyon I – Laboratoire d'informatique du Parallélisme
- 3:
- CNRS : UMR6533 – IN2P3 – Université Blaise Pascal - Clermont-Ferrand II
- Domain : Computer Science/Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
- Keywords : Grid Computing – Network Enabled Servers – Client-Server Computing – DIET
- Internal note : RR-6027; RR-6027
- Comment : Rapport de Recherche INRIA – Equipe de recherche GRAAL
- Available versions : v1 (2006-11-22) v2 (2006-11-23) v3 (2006-11-27)
- inria-00115569, version 2
- http://hal.inria.fr/inria-00115569
- oai:hal.inria.fr:inria-00115569
- From:
- Submitted on: Thursday, 23 November 2006 10:47:51
- Updated on: Thursday, 23 November 2006 10:48:36




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