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L. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
SNAP: A Protocol for Negotiating Service Level.. - Foster, Kesselman.. (2002)   (16 citations)  (Correct)

....Grid RM architecture must remain open enough to support multiple concurrent brokering strategies across resources that might be shared by multiple user communities. 7 Other Related Work Numerous researchers have investigated approaches to QoS delivery [22]and resource reservation for networks [12, 14, 39], CPUs [24] and other resources. Proposals for advance reservations typically employ cooperating servers that coordinate advance reservations along an end to end path [39, 14, 12, 23] Techniques have been proposed for representing advance reservations, for balancing immediate and advance ....

....Work Numerous researchers have investigated approaches to QoS delivery [22]and resource reservation for networks [12, 14, 39] CPUs [24] and other resources. Proposals for advance reservations typically employ cooperating servers that coordinate advance reservations along an end to end path [39, 14, 12, 23]. Techniques have been proposed for representing advance reservations, for balancing immediate and advance reservations [14] for advance reservation of predictive flows [12] However, this work has not addressed the co reservation of resources of different types. The Condor high throughput ....

L. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


Resource Co-Allocation in Computational Grids - Czajkowski, Foster, Kesselman (1999)   (19 citations)  (Correct)

....has not previously received attention in the high performance distributed computing community. While co allocation issues arise in other situations (for example, co allocation of processors and memory [20] co allocation of CPU and networks [25, 24] setup of reservations along network paths [28, 10, 8, 16, 2]) the dynamic nature of the Grid environment poses special challenges including the potential for failure and the heterogenous nature of the underlying resource set. In this paper, we propose a layered co allocation architecture that addresses the challenges of Grid environments by providing a ....

....note that access to Legion co allocation methods can only be obtained from applications that can access the Legion object oriented programming model. Within the networking community, various protocols have been proposed and are being investigated for coallocating network resources along a route [28, 10, 8, 16, 2]. Also relevant to the co allocation problem is multimedia system research concerned with identifying the appropriate mix of resources required to provide desired end to end QoS. Multimedia applications have motivated the development of techniques for allocating both memory and CPU for channel ....

L.C. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


End-to-End Quality of Service for High-End Applications - Foster, Roy, Sander, Winkler (1999)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

....applications introduces major challenges at both the architecture and network levels. At the architecture level, new concepts and constructs are required for dealing with end to end flows that involve multiple scarce resources: for example, advance reservation mechanisms, to ensure availability [4, 5, 18]; co reservation of network, compute, storage, and other resources [2] control and monitoring APIs for application level adaptation; and policy mechanisms able to deal with large reservations and complex hierarchical allocation strategies. At the network level, increasingly popular differentiated ....

....co reservation of heterogeneous collections of resources for end to end QoS and the use of DS mechanisms to support flow types encountered in highend applications. Proposals for advance reservations typically employ cooperating servers that coordinate advance reservations along an end to end path [18, 5, 4, 10]. Techniques have been proposed for representing advance reservations, for balancing immediate and advance reservations [5] for advance reservation of predictive flows [4] However, this work has not addressed the co reservation of resources of different types. The concept of a bandwidth broker ....

L.C. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


A Quality of Service Architecture that Combines Resource.. - Foster, Roy, Sander (2000)   (45 citations)  (Correct)

.... applications usually specify quality of service (QoS) requirements when a connection is established and do not change them subsequently; the QoS system in turn guarantees that (modulo system failures or preemptions) the reservation will not be reduced during the lifetime of the application [1], 2] In contrast, applications that use adaptation do not make reservations but instead adapt to the network conditions at hand by responding to some form of feedback, whether explicit (notification of network conditions) or implicit (noticing that bandwidth is low) Adaptation may occur when ....

L. Wolf and R. Steinmetz, "Concepts for reservation in advance," Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 4, May 1997.


A Distributed Resource Management Architecture.. - Foster.. (1999)   (54 citations)  (Correct)

....QoS. Here we review briefly some relevant work; space constraints prevent a complete survey. Proposals for advance reservations in the Internet typically implement advance reservation capabilities via cooperating sets of servers that coordinate advance reservations along an end toend path [19, 7, 6, 12, 2]. Techniques have been proposed for representing advance reservations, for balancing immediate and advance reservations [7] for advance reservation of predictive flows [6] and for handling multicast [2] However, this work has not addressed problems that arise when an application requires ....

L.C. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


SNAP: A Protocol for Negotiating Service Level.. - Czajkowski.. (2002)   (16 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

L. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for reservation in advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


Design and Evaluation of a Bandwidth Broker that Provides Network .. - Sander (2003)   (3 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

L.C. Wolf and R. Steinmetz. Concepts for Reservation in Advance. Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications, 4(3), May 1997.


End-to-End Quality of Service for High-End Applications - Foster, Fidler, Roy.. (1999)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

L.C. Wolf, and R. Steinmetz, Concepts for Reservation in Advance, Kluwer Journal on Multimedia Tools and Applications 4 (3) (1997).

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