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Implementation and comprehensive study of demand migration systems in Gipsy

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Implementation and comprehensive study of demand migration systems in Gipsy

Pourteymour, Amir Hossein (2008) Implementation and comprehensive study of demand migration systems in Gipsy. Masters thesis, Concordia University.

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Abstract

Intensional programming is a programming language paradigm based on the notion of declarative programming where the declarations are evaluated in an inherent multidimensional context space. Program identifiers are evaluated in a context, where each demand is generated, propagated, computed, and stored as an identifier-context pair. General Intensional Programming System (GIPSY) is a hybrid multi-language programming system that overcame the limitation of previous Intensional Programming systems by designing a Demand Migration Framework (DMF) to provide a generic, dynamic, and technology-independent infrastructure. A DMF instance, called a Demand Migration System (DMS), is used to propagate demands from one GIPSY execution node to another. A GIPSY program is executed using three components, each of which possibly having several instances, all of which possibly being executed on different nodes: the Demand Generator (DG), that generates demands according to the compiled Lucid program, the Demand Worker (DW), that executes procedure calls embedded in the Lucid program, and the DMS, that acts as a communication/storage middleware between the latter. This thesis extends the previous investigations on the DMF by applying and extending DMF rationales and design to implement an instance of our DMS using Java Message Service (JMS-DMS). JMS-DMS is an investigation toward having the combination of two paradigms of Message-Oriented Middleware (MOM) and Event-Driven Architecture (EDA) to handle our demand-driven computation. We also investigate on the behavior of our instances in different perspectives such as latency, dispatching, availability, scalability, maintainability, and configurability, which complements our research toward having the robust Demand Migration System.

Divisions:Concordia University > Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science > Computer Science and Software Engineering
Item Type:Thesis (Masters)
Authors:Pourteymour, Amir Hossein
Pagination:xiii, 155 leaves : ill. ; 29 cm.
Institution:Concordia University
Degree Name:M. Comp. Sc.
Program:Computer Science and Software Engineering
Date:2008
Thesis Supervisor(s):Paquet, J
Identification Number:LE 3 C66C67M 2008 P68
ID Code:975918
Deposited By: Concordia University Library
Deposited On:22 Jan 2013 16:17
Last Modified:13 Jul 2020 20:09
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