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Reasons for Migrating Code

Reasons for Migrating Code. The principle of dynamically configuring a client to communicate to a server. The client first fetches the necessary software, and then invokes the server. Models for Code Migration. Transfer only the code, with initialization data.

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Reasons for Migrating Code

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  1. Reasons for Migrating Code • The principle of dynamically configuring a client to communicate to a server. The client first fetches the necessary software, and then invokes the server.

  2. Models for Code Migration Transfer only the code, with initialization data Executable segment can be transferred Example, applet • Alternatives for code migration.

  3. Migration and Local Resources Example, database and complete web site Example, device example, files Resource-to machine binding Process-to-resource binding Actions to be taken with respect to the references to local resources when migrating code to another machine ----- GR: establish a global system-wide reference MV: move the resource CP: copy the value of the resource RB: rebind processes to locally available resource

  4. Migration in Heterogeneous Systems 3-15 • The principle of maintaining a migration stack to support migration of an execution segment in a heterogeneous environment

  5. Software Agents • Definition: an autonomous process capable of reacting to, and initiating changes in, its environment, possibly in collaboration with users and other agents. • Collaborative agent: agent that forms part of a multi-agent system, in which agents seek to achieve some common goal through collaboration • Mobile agent: agent having the capability to move between different machines. • Interface agent: agent that assists an end user in the use of one or more applications. • (learning) • Information agent: agent that manages information from different sources.

  6. Software Agents in Distributed Systems • Some important properties by which different types of agents can be distinguished.

  7. Challenges in agent systems • How can the inherent interdependence between agents be managed efficiently? • Common goals: how to interact through communication, negotiation, coordination, and organizational division of jobs and responsibilities • No common goals: manage and minimize the negative effects of the inherent independence • What type of agent control and organization structure is appropriate: centralized? distributed? • Depends on constraints of the environment, the task, the agent • What protocol/language should be used as a common base for communication? • What capabilities should the agent be given? • Intelligence?

  8. What should be modeled as an Agent • To take advantage of distributed computing resources • To coordinate teams of interacting robots • To increase system robustness • To assist humans • To model communities of interacting experts • To simplify modeling of complex processes • To model processes that are normally conducted by multiple agents

  9. Agent Technology Agent communication channel • The general model of an agent platform (adapted from [fipa98-mgt]).

  10. Agent Communication Languages (1) • Examples of different message types in the FIPA ACL [fipa98-acl], giving the purpose of a message, along with the description of the actual message content.

  11. Agent Communication Languages (2) • A simple example of a FIPA ACL message sent between two agents using Prolog to express genealogy information.

  12. Applications for Agents • Communities of cooperating robots • Web-based agents, electronic personal assistants • Agents in entertainment • Interactive agents with roles and personalities • Modeling economic and business practice • Monitoring agents • Patient, satellite, … • Group decision making and problem solving • Concurrent engineering: design and manufacturing • Intelligent design assistant • Decision-making support: military logistics, command, control • Filtering information, generate plan alternatives, replan when circumstances change, assess hypotheses based on uncertain data

  13. Issues in Agent-Based Systems • Agent architecture • Communication frameworks • Control • Coordination and cooperation • Negotiation • Reconfigurable/reusable agents

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