| R. F. Gurwitz, M. A. Dean, and R. E. Schantz. Programming support in the Cronus distributed oper- ating system. In Proceedings of lhe Sixlh Inlernalional Conference on Dislribuled Corapuling Sysleras, pages 486-493, May 1986. |
....an application running under the Cronus operating system. Status: Active. An additional cluster is planned for installation at the Rome Air Development Center. 19 Contact: R.E. Schantz or R.F. Gurwitz, BBN Laboratories Incorporated, 10 Moulton Street, Cambridge, MA. 02238. References: 123] [124], 125] 2.15 DACNOS Main Goal The Distributed Academic Computing Networking Operating System is part of HECTOR, a joint project of IBM Germany and the University of Karlsruhe, W Germany. The main design objectives are preservation of investment, that means that DACNOS must appear as a ....
R.F. Gurwitz, M.A. Dean, and R.E. Schantz, "Programming Support in the Cronus Distributed Operating System", In Proc. 6th Int. Conf. on Distributed Computing Systems, pages 486--493, Cambridge, MA, May 1986.
....searches or produce summary information. The implementation and performance of a sorting tool are discussed in section 5.2. 4. 3 Local File System The local file servers for Bridge are an adaptation of the Elementary File System (EFS) constructed for the Cronus distributed system project at BBN [15, 16]. EFS is a simple, stateless file system with a flat name space and no access control. File names are numbers that are used to hash into a directory. Files are represented as doubly linked circular lists of blocks. A pointer to the first block of a file can be found in the file s EFS directory ....
R. F. Gurwitz, M. A. Dean, and R. E. Schantz, "Programming support in the Cronus distributed operating system," in Sixth International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, pp. 486--493, May 1986.
....but does not provide primitive objects that are suitable for building abstract highlevel objects. Desperanto[14] has similar goals as RSC, but does not provide a general concept for passing protected abstract objects to other processes. Closest to the DACNOS design goals come the Cronus[9] and HCS[2] projects. These systems also attack the problems of heterogeneity and preservation of existing interfaces. Differences exist in the degree of transparency, enforcement of access control and support of resource management. The experience with the DACNOS prototype proved that the ....
R.F. Gurwitz, M.A. Dean, and R.E. Schantz, "Programming Support in the Cronus Distributed Operating System" in Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, IEEE (1986).
....range. # location content Some naming schemes embed location specific information in object names. The intent is to use this information to speed up the process of locating the object. We therefore distinguish between locationsensitive and location insensitive names. Locus [Pop85] and Cronus [Gur86, Sch86] are examples of systems that use location sensitive names. Most other systems use location insensitive names [Sin89, Mul85, Das88] # structure Some naming schemes define a hierarchy, where an object name designates a path through the name tree. With such a scheme, names have a hierarchical ....
Robert F. Gurwitz, Michael A. Dean, and Richard E. Schantz, "Programming Support in the Cronus Distributed Operating System" Proceedings 6th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, pp. 486-493 (May 19-23, 1986).
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Gurwitz, R., Dean, M., and Schantz, R. #1986#. Programming Support in the Cronus Distributed Operating System. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems,May, 1986.
No context found.
R. F. Gurwitz, M. A. Dean, and R. E. Schantz. Programming support in the Cronus distributed oper- ating system. In Proceedings of lhe Sixlh Inlernalional Conference on Dislribuled Corapuling Sysleras, pages 486-493, May 1986.
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