Appendix a caberNet Related Projects


List of relevant chapters



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List of relevant chapters:

Mobile Systems


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project:

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:
Project Title: Traffic Engineering for Service-Integrated Networks with Real-time Communications
Start Date: ongoing
End Date:
URL: http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TKRN/world/abro/ongore.htm
CaberNet members involved on the project: University of Hamburg, Germany
Other Partners: University of Tübingen; University of Calgary, Canada; Université Pierre et Marie Curie, LIP6, Paris, France; Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 
The Project:
This long term project tries to approach various aspects of Traffic Engineering including:

  • Load measurement at different interfaces of a protocol / service hierarchy within service-integrated networks focussing on video traffic (MPEG-1/ -2, H.261, H. 263) on one hand and on UDP / IP traffic on the other hand

  • Load modelling based on measurements covering again video traffic as well as packet traffic

  • Load prediction by means of maudlin load transformation processes

  • Construction of load generators for synthetic load in LANs or in Internets;

  • Traffic management, e.g. priorization of video traffic in DiffServ based networks

List of relevant chapters:

Distributed Multimedia Platforms


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project

  • Wolf J., Wolfinger B.E., Efficient Resource Management for Distributed Applications with Real-Time Requirements in Broadcast Networks, 8th CaberNet Radicals Workshop, 2003

  • Wolfinger B.E., Wolf J., le Grand G., Improving Node Behavior in a QoS Control Environment for Local Broadcast Networks, Proc. of the International Symposium on Performance Evaluation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems (SPECTS), 2003

  • Wolf J., Wolfinger B.E., le Grand G., Anelli P., Leistungsbewertung von Algorithmen zur dynamischen Ressourcenverwaltung in lokalen "Broadcast"- Netzen, GI/ITG-Fachtagung "Kommunikation in Verteilten Systemen" KiVS 2003, Leipzig, Februar 2003

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:
Project Title: Trust and Security Aspects of Distributed Component-Structured Software
Start Date: Jan. 2002
End Date: Dec. 2004
URL: http://ls4-www.cs.uni-dortmund.de/RVS/Projekte_e.html#tsa
CaberNet members involved on the project: -
Other Partners: -
The Project:
Component-structured software is composed from components which are independently created, combined, and deployed. The high number of principals is a reason for more subtle security risks than in monolithic programs and special protection mechanisms are needed, which, however, introduce overhead and influence the application performance. Therefore a trust management system is applied which keeps track of the current risks, experiences, and trust levels of components and principals. The protection mechanisms employed in the applications are equipped with adaptation functions which adjust the monitoring efforts to the current trust levels and requirements.
List of relevant chapters:

Distributed Systems Security, Software Architectures for Distributed and Dependable Systems



Three publications reporting outcomes from the project:

  • P. Herrmann: Formal Security Policy Verification of Distributed Component-Structured Software. To appear in: 23rd IFIP International Conference on Formal Techniques for Networked and Distributed Systems (FORTE'2003), IFIP, LNCS, Berlin, September/October 2003, Springer-Verlag.

  • P. Herrmann: Trust-Based Protection of Software Component Users and Designers. In: 1st International Conference on Trust Management, pp. 75-90, LNCS 2692, Heraklion, May 2003, Springer-Verlag.

  • P. Herrmann, L. Wiebusch, H. Krumm: State-Based Security Policy Enforcement in Component-Based E-Commerce Applications. In: 2nd IFIP Conference on E-Commerce, E-Business & E-Government (I3E), pp. 195-209, Lisbon, October 2002. Kluwer Academic Publisher.

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:

Project Title: Validation of Graphically Elicited Multi-variate Probability Models for Safety Assessment of Computer-based Systems

Start Date: March 2000
End Date: February 2002
URL: http://www.csr.city.ac.uk/csr_city/projects/ropa.html

CaberNet members involved on the project: City University, UK

Other Partners:

The Project:

As in the case of other non-trivial software-based systems, we must assume that failure of safety critical systems is possible, and attempt to discover whether or not, in the case of each system, failure is sufficiently unlikely for the system to be licensed for operational use. There are a number of special features of complex, software-based, safety-critical systems which contribute to the difficulty of assessing their dependability. There is insufficient objective statistical evidence to assure - by testing, or from actual operation of related systems in related environments - that the required level of reliability has been achieved in the case of a new system. For this reason, safety assessors turn to other sources of evidence in an attempt to increase their assurance that such a system is fit for purpose. These other sources might include measurable evidence relating to the quality of the requirements elicitation and design processes, or to the competence of development personnel; as well as the use of more subjective expert assessment of these and other factors. In taking account of much of this evidence, there will not always be scientifically accepted or widely agreed relationships and causal models on which to rely.

This project attempts to investigate the contribution that graphical probability models or "belief networks" might make to these problems. In particular it focuses on: Examining and comparing the value of alternative graphical formalisms such as Directed Acyclic Graphs, Undirected Graphs and Chain Graphs. In particular we hope that use of these multiple formalisms might increase our assurance that the builders and users of such graphical models understand the "system of conditional independence assumptions" depicted by such graphs as fully and correctly as possible. The development of automated methods of providing a multiplicity of forms of feedback of the structure, assumptions and consequences of such graphical probability models. We intend that this model feedback should include automatically computed symbolic (as well as numeric) forms of model output. In these ways we aim to develop methods of deepening a safety assessment expert's appreciation of, and interaction with, the formal conditional-independence model expressed by a graphical formalism, and hence gaining confidence that such models, ultimately and after appropriate adjustment, can become a valuable aid to and a fair representation of the coherent beliefs of such experts.

List of relevant chapters:

Dependable Systems


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:
Project Title: Verification of Quality of Service Properties in Timed Systems
Start Date: 2000
End Date: 2003
URL: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~mzk/realtime/
CaberNet members involved on the project: University of Birmingham
Other Partners:
The Project:
This EPSRC-funded project (grant GR/N22960) aims to address the foundations of the verification of quality of service properties of real-time systems. The design and analysis of many systems, such as communication protocols, embedded systems and multimedia protocols, requires detailed knowledge of their real-time aspects, in addition to the functional requirements. Existing approaches, however, can only verify deterministic (hard) deadlines, i.e. properties such as "if the packet is sent then it will be delivered within 80 ms". In the presence of lossy media or faulty hardware, hard deadlines can be too restrictive. Probabilistic (soft) deadlines provide a viable alternative; these express the probability of a certain target of quality of service being achieved (here delivery occurring within 80 ms with probability at least 90%/at most 3%). For applications such as audio or multimedia protocols, which process and transmit continuous media data, it is often necessary to allow stochastic timing, in the sense that the user could specify that packets are sent according to exponential or normal distribution. In such cases, measures such as mean time to delivery are additionally required.
List of relevant chapters:

Distributed Systems Security, Rigorous Design


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project

  • M. Kwiatkowska, G. Norman and J. Sproston Probabilistic Model Checking of Deadline Properties in the IEEE1394 FireWire Root Contention Protocol Special Issue of Formal Aspects of Computing, 14, pp. 295-318 2003

  • M. Kwiatkowska, G. Norman, R. Segala, J. Sproston Automatic Verification of Real-time Systems with Discrete Probability Distributions Theoretical Computer Science, 282, pp. 101-150 2002

  • Verifying Quantitative Properties of Continuous Probabilistic Timed Automata (M.Z. Kwiatkowska, R. Segala. J. Sproston). In Proc. 12th International Conference on Concurrency Theory (CONCUR'00), LNCS 1877, pp. 123-137, Springer-Verlag 2000

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:

Project Title: Workload based Caching and Scheduling Algorithms for Proxy Servers

Start Date:
End Date:
URL:
CaberNet members involved on the project: RWTH Aachen, Germany
Other Partners:

The Project:

In this project we exploit knowledge about recent requests at web-proxies, obtained from a statistical study of request logs, to improve the performance (response time and hit rate) of web proxy servers. We do so by obtaining, using statistical techniques, a classification of the proxy requests based on the requested object size. This classification then forms the basis for a class-based caching approach and a weighted-fair priority queueing approach. Analytical studies, simulations and a prototype implementation show the advantages of our approach, which can be implemented in a very effective way (with lower costs than competing caching and scheduling strategies). Our approach also allows for an adaptive scheduling and caching scheme (with which we are currently experimenting).



List of relevant chapters:

Service-oriented Computing


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project

Network of Excellence in Distributed and Dependable Computing Systems
Acronym:

Project Title: XenoServers

Start Date:
End Date:
URL: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/SRG/netos/xeno

CaberNet members involved on the project: University of Cambridge, UK

Other Partners:

The Project:

This project aims to build a public infrastructure for wide-area distributed computing. We envisage a world in which Xenoserver execution platforms will be scattered across the globe and available for any member of the public to submit code for execution. Crucially, the sponsor of the code will be billed for all the resources used or reserved during the course of execution. This will serve to encourage load balancing, limit congestion, and hopefully even make the platform self-financing. As part of this project we are developing XenoStore, a distributed peer-to-peer storage system which provides high reliability and availability by the use of advanced caching and coding techniques.



List of relevant chapters:

Network Storage Services


Three publications reporting outcomes from the project

  • Xen and the Art of Virtualization. P. Barham, B. Dragovic, K. Fraser, S.T.m Harris, A. Ho, R. Neugebar, I. Pratt, A. Warfield. Proceedings of the ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP), October 2003

  • Language support for lightweight transactions. T. Harris, K. Fraser. In the 18th ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications (OOPSLA-2003), October 2003.

  • Design choices for language-based transactions. T. Harris Technical Report UCAM-CL-TR-572, August 2003





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