Distributed Systems: Difference between revisions

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==Introduction==
==Introduction==

Out of the many possible definitions of a distributed system, we herein employ the following,
which is perhaps the most general (and in particular more general than Lamports humorous remark
that "a distributed system is the one that prevents you from working because of the failure of
a machine that you had never heard of".)



==Concurrency==
==Concurrency==

Revision as of 09:21, 1 December 2004

Introduction

Out of the many possible definitions of a distributed system, we herein employ the following, which is perhaps the most general (and in particular more general than Lamports humorous remark that "a distributed system is the one that prevents you from working because of the failure of a machine that you had never heard of".)


Concurrency

Trust

Fault Tolerance

Distributed systems allow parts of the system to be located on separate computers and different locations. So business logic and data can be reached from any remote computer (location).

Distributed objects are the most recent development in distributed computing. Distributed object technologies such as Java RMI, CORBA, and DCOM allow objects running on one machine to be used by applications on different computers.