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Distributed Systems

A Brief Introduction

OUTLINE
BRIEF HISTORY. WHAT ARE DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS ?
? WHY DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS ? ? ADVANTAGES OF D.S. OVER THE CENTRALIZED SYSTEM. ADVANTAGES OF D.S. OVER INDEPENDENT PCS.

OUTLINE (Contd.)
ORGANISATION OF DISTRIBUTED
SYSTEM. GOALS OF D.S. Resource Sharing. Openness. Transparency. Scalability.

OUTLINE (Contd.)
Concurrency. TYPES OF DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS. Distributed Computing Systems. Distributed Information Systems. Distributed Pervasive Systems. SUMMARY.

HISTORY

1945~1985 Computers were large and expensive. No way to connect them.

All systems were Centralized Systems.

Mid-1980s

Powerful microprocessors. High Speed Computer Networks (LANs , WANs).

HISTORY (Contd.)
Then came the

DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS

What are Distributed Systems ? ?

A distributed system is a piece of software that ensures that: a collection of independent computers appears to its users as a single coherent system. Two aspects: (1) independent computers and (2) single system => middleware.

EXAMPLES

World Wide Web (WWW) is the biggest example of distributed system.

Others are

The internet An intranet which is a portion of the internet managed by an organization

WHY DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS ? ?

availability of powerful yet cheap microprocessors (PCs, workstations), continuing advances in communication technology

ADVANTAGES OF D.S. OVER CENTRALIZED SYSTEM:

Economics: A collection of microprocessors offer a better price/performance than mainframes. Low price/performance ratio: cost effective way to increase computing power. Reliability: If one machine crashes, the system as a whole can still survive. Higher availability and improved reliability.

ADVANTAGES (Contd.)
Speed: a distributed system may have more
total computing power than a mainframe. Ex.: 10,000 CPU chips, each running at 50 MIPS. Not possible to build 500,000 MIPS single processor. Enhanced performance through load distributing.

ADVANTAGES (Contd.)

Incremental growth: Computing power can be added in small increments. This leads to Modular expandability

ADVANTAGES OF D.S. OVER INDEPENDENT PCs:


Data sharing: allow many users to access
to a common data base.

Resource Sharing: expensive peripherals like color printers.

ADVANTAGES (Contd.)

Communication: enhance human-tohuman communication. E.g.: email, chat. Flexibility: spread the workload over the available machines

ORGANIZATION OF D.S.:

A distributed system organized as middleware. The middleware layer extends over multiple machines, and offers each application the same interface.

GOALS OF D.S. :

Resource Sharing. Openness. Transparency. Scalability. Concurrency.

RESOURCE SHARING:

With Distributed Systems, it is easier for users to access remote resources and to share resources with other users. Examples: printers, files, Web pages, etc A distributed system should also make it easier for users to exchange information. Easier resource and data exchange could cause security problems a distributed system should deal with this problem.

OPENNESS:

The openness of DS is determined primarily by the degree to which new resourcesharing services can be added and be made available for use by a variety of client programs.

TRANSPARENCY:

It hides the fact that the processes and resources are physically distributed across multiple computers. Transparency is of various forms as follows:

TRANSPARENCY (Contd.)

SCALABILITY:

A system is described as scalable if it remains effective when there is a significant increase in the number of resources and the number of users. Challenges:

Controlling the cost of resources or money. Controlling the performance loss.

CONCURRENCY:

There is a possibility that several clients will attempt to access a shared resource at the same time. Any object that represents a shared resource in a distributed system must be responsible for ensuring that operates correctly in a concurrent environment.

TYPES OF D.S. :
Distributed Computing Systems.

Cluster Computing Systems. Grid Computing Systems.

Distributed Information Systems. Distributed Pervasive Systems.

DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING SYSTEMS:


Goal: High performance computing tasks. Cluster Computing Systems: A supercomputer built from off the shelf computer in a high-speed network (usually a LAN) Most common use: a single program is run in parallel on multiple machines

(Contd.)
Grid Computing Systems: Contrary to clusters, grids are usually composed of different types of computers (hardware, OS, network, security, etc.) Resources from different organizations are brought together to allow collaboration Examples: SETI@home, WWW

DISTRIBUTED INFORMATION SYSTEMS:

Goal: Distribute information across several Servers. Remote processes called Clients access the servers to manipulate the information Different communication models are used. The most usual are RPC (Remote Procedure Calls) and the object oriented RMI (Remote Method Invocations)

(Contd.)

Often associated with Transaction systems Examples: Banks; Travel agencies; Rent-a-Cars; Etc

DISTRIBUTED PERVASIVE SYSTEMS:

These are the distributed systems involving mobile and embedded computer devices like Small, wireless, battery-powered devices (PDAs, smart phones, sensors, wireless surveillance cams, portable ECG monitors, etc.) These systems characterized by their instability when compared to more traditional distributed systems

(Contd.)

Pervasive Systems are all around us, and ideally should be able to adapt to the lack of human administrative control: Automatically connect to a different network; Discover services and react accordingly; Automatic self configuration (E.g.: UPnP Universal Plug and Play) Examples: Home Systems, Electronic Health Care Systems, Sensor Networks, etc.

SUMMARY

Distributed systems are everywhere

Internet, intranet, wireless networks.

Resource sharing is the main motivating factor for constructing distributed systems. The construction of distributed systems produces many challenges like Secure communication over public networks.

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