| B. Braden, A. Cerpa, T. Faber, B. Lindell, G. Phillips, and J. Kann. Introduction to the ASP execution environment. Technical report, USC/Information Science Institute, Feb. 2000. Available from http://www.isi.edu/activesignal /ARP/. |
....all together: a complete Ping AA 8 5.1 Ping AA . 8 A Availability of ASP EE source code 10 1 Introduction This tutorial provides examples for programmers who wish to develop Active Applications (AAs) using the ASP Execution Environment [1]. The ASP Execution Environment (ASP EE) is an active network environment for executing network protocol code written in Java. AAs execute under the ASP EE similar to the way applications execute under a conventional operating system. In place of a system call interface, the ASP EE provides active ....
.... host.isi.edu 9999 asp private vnet: 5 Figure 2: Example Rsh invocation to launch a given AA 3 Launching an Active Application (AA) Typically, an AA will be launched by a request originating from a UA. The ASP EE has de ned a protocol for the UA and the AA to communicate with each other. See [1] for further details. Currently, the UA protocol is layered on TCP, allowing a UA to communicate with an AA on any host that has IP accessibility. We have provided a general purpose UA that might be suitable for most AA developers. The Rsh UA provides functionality similar to a remote shell. It ....
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Bob Braden, Alberto Cerpa, Ted Faber, Bob Lindell, Graham Phillips, and Je Kann. Introduction to the ASP Execution Environment, 2000. http: //www.isi.edu/active-signal/ARP.
....code written in Java as active applications (AAs) Active computations are assumed to be launched when User Applications (UAs) contact the local ASP EE using a UA AA API. The general active networking model, including the roles of EEs, AAs, and UAs, is summarized in Introduction to the ASP EE [2], with which we assume some familiarity. In overview, the ASP EE is planned to support: 1. Dynamic loading of AA classes. 2. Security and Resource Protection 3. Network I O (Section 4) including support for both virtual connectivity and native IP connectivity [1] 4. The UA AA API (Section ....
....query unicast and multicast routing (Section 6) 8. Under native IP connectivity, an interface to kernel trac control, including packet classi cation and scheduling (Section 7) Currently, there are limitations in the support for items 2, 3, 7, and 8 as described in Introduction to the ASP EE [2]. This document describes the programming conventions that are needed to prepare an AA to execute under the ASP EE, including the ASP EE s interface to AAs known as the protocol programming interface (PPI) In brief outline, the ASP EE operates in the following manner. For a more complete ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Bob Braden, Alberto Cerpa, Ted Faber, Bob Lindell, Graham Phillips, and Je Kann. Introduction to the ASP Execution Environment, 2000. http://www.isi.edu/active-signal/ARP.
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B. Braden, A. Cerpa, T. Faber, B. Lindell, G. Phillips, and J. Kann. Introduction to the ASP execution environment. Technical report, USC/Information Science Institute, Feb. 2000. Available from http://www.isi.edu/activesignal /ARP/.
No context found.
B. Braden, A. Cerpa, T. Faber, B. Lindell, G. Phillips, J. Kann, and V. Shenoy. Introduction to the ASP execution environment (v1.5). Available as http://www.isi.edu/active-signal/ARP/ DOCUMENTS/ASP_EE.ps, November 2001.
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