jini coordination-based system

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JINI Coordination-Based System By Anthony Friel * David Kiernan * Jasper Wood

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JINI Coordination-Based System. By Anthony Friel * David Kiernan * Jasper Wood. New generation of distributed systems that assume that the components of the system are distributed and that the problem lies in the coordination of the activities of the components. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINICoordination-Based System

By Anthony Friel * David Kiernan * Jasper Wood

Page 2: JINI Coordination-Based System

Coordination-Based Systems

• New generation of distributed systems that assume that the components of the system are distributed and that the problem lies in the coordination of the activities of the components

• If a distributed system is seen as a collection of processes a coordination-based system handles the communications and cooperation between the processes while the processes handle the computations

Page 3: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI as a Coordination System• JINI is more than a coordination system• Referred to as such because:

– supports generative communications using ‘JavaSpaces’

– lets clients discover services when they become available

– has distributed event and notification system

• JavaSpaces – shared database that stores tuples, provides temporal & referential uncoupling of processes

Page 4: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI vs Tib/Rendezvous (1)

NoneLookup serviceNaming Services

Character stringsByte stringsNames

General purposeGeneral purposeProcesses

Incoming messagesCall-back serviceEvent Mechanism

Self-describingProcess specificMessages

MulticastingJava RMINetwork communications

Publish/subscribeGenerative commsCoordination Model

Uncoupling processesFlexible IntegrationDesign Goal

Tib/RendezvousJINI

Page 5: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI vs Tib/Rendezvous (2)

Secure channelsBased on JavaSecurity

No explicit supportNo explicit supportRecovery

YesNoProcess groups

YesYesReliable

NoNoCaching/Replication

NoAs JavaSpace operations

Locking

Single processesMultiple processes

MessagesMethod InvocationsTransactions

Tib/RendezvousJINI

Page 6: JINI Coordination-Based System

History

From the people who brought you

java…

its JINI!

Page 7: JINI Coordination-Based System

Coordination Model• JavaSpaces provide

temporal and referential uncoupling of processes

• Tuples are marshaled and stored in serialized form

• Each time the ‘write’ command is used on a tuple a marshaled copy is stored in the javaSpace as a tuple instance

• To read a tuple instance the process provides a tuple template to match against the instance stored in the javaSpace

Page 8: JINI Coordination-Based System

Architecture

• Offers a small set of features to allow creation of dispersed applications

• Lowest layer: – JINI infrastructure

• Second Layer: – general-purpose facilities

• Highest Layer: – clients and servers

Can be viewed as a 3-layer model

Page 9: JINI Coordination-Based System

Communication• Events

– A client may access an event by registering with the object that owns the event

– Client passes listener object– Registration leased, notifications expire– No delivery guarantees , sequence no– Client notified about particular object, passes

template to id object it wishes to be notified about

– First notified first to access, may remove object (read), hard to avoid

Page 10: JINI Coordination-Based System

Processes (1)

• Implementation of a JavaSpace

• Good efficient distributed implementation of a JavaSpace has to solve 2 problems

• What is the key to this problem ? Tuples!

• Tuples typed

• Subspaces can be organised as hash tables

Page 11: JINI Coordination-Based System

Processes (2)

• Processing on a multiprocessor

• Processing on a multicomputer

Page 12: JINI Coordination-Based System

Processes (3)

• The inverse design

Page 13: JINI Coordination-Based System

Processes (4)

• The 2 methods combined

Page 14: JINI Coordination-Based System

Naming

• JINI does provide– JINI lookup service

– leasing

• No conventional naming service such as is found in object-based or distributed file systems

• Though these can be implemented in JINI

                             

Page 15: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI Lookup Service(1)

• Lookup Service

• JavaSpace

• Jini Lookup Service

• Registering Services

Page 16: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI Lookup Service(2)

• Service Identifier

• Service Item

Page 17: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI Lookup Service(3)

• Predefined Tuples

Page 18: JINI Coordination-Based System

JINI Lookup Service(4)

• Can several Lookup Services co-exist?

• How is a Lookup Service looked up

Page 19: JINI Coordination-Based System

Leasing

• A referenced object keeps track of who is referring to it

• This leads to what are known as reference lists

• Leases are used to keep the list short

• When a lease expires, a reference becomes invalid and is removed from the object’s reference list.

Page 20: JINI Coordination-Based System

Synchronization

• JINI provides a number of mechanisms– JavaSpace includes the

operations ‘read’ & ‘take’

– Transactions

• ‘read’ and ‘take’ are blocking operations

• They can be used to express many different synchronization patterns

Page 21: JINI Coordination-Based System

Transactions• Carry out operations

on multiple objects• Two phase commit

protocol• Set of interfaces• The actual

implementation is left to others

• Can be configured with default transaction manager

• The overall model of a transaction is shown below

Page 22: JINI Coordination-Based System

Caching and Replication

• JINI provides no measures for caching or replication.

• This is left to applications that are built as part of the JINI-based system.

Page 23: JINI Coordination-Based System

Fault Tolerance

• JINI itself has none except a transaction manager

• Components that implement JINI are expected to implement their own measures

• JINI communications is done using Java RMI which is seen to be reliable

• Research into adding fault tolerance has lead to the following two ideas– Incorporating fault

tolerance into tuple spaces (such as JavaSpaces)

– Grouping tuple space operations into transactions

Page 24: JINI Coordination-Based System

Security

• JAAS - Java Authentication and Authorization Service

• Handles user authentication and authorization

• Separates client interface for these services from the actual services using the PAM

• JAAS is a java implementation of PAM

• JINI relies on Java RMI to provide its security

• JAAS has also been added to JINI

Page 25: JINI Coordination-Based System

Summary

• Naming – yes• Synchronization – sort of• Caching – no• Replication – nope• Fault tolerance – not really• Security – RMI will take

care of it

Basically :

Awww! Can’t

someone else do it