| J. Gosling and H. McGilton, "The Javalanguage environment a white paper," May 1996. http://java.sun.com/docs/white/langenv. |
....user interference. 4.6 The insecurity of mobile code Another problem with the use of mobile agents is the safety requirements a generic mobile agent system must ful ll in order to execute foreign code. This is usually achieved by running the code on safe virtual machines that enforce safety [GM95,WLAG93] These techniques isolate the system from the mobile agent, and the agent is then restricted to access the system through well de ned services. This voids our argument that mobile agents are useful in software deployment. We argued that the software that is to be deployed needs some ....
J. Gosling and H. McGilton. The java language environment: A white paper. Technical report, Sun Microsystems, Inc, May 1995.
....large error) the impact on performance would be minimal. 5. Related Work Considerable research has been done in the area of dynamic adaptation at an implementation level. There are a multitude of programming languages and libraries that provide dynamic linking and binding mechanisms (e.g. [15,16]) as well as exception handling capabilities and distributed debugging [14] Systems of this kind allow selfrepair to be programmed on a per system basis, but do not provide external, reusable mechanisms that can be added to systems in a disciplined manner, as with an architecture driven ....
Gosling, J. and McGilton, H. The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. Sun Microsystems Computer Company, Mountain View, California, May 1996. Available at http://java,sun,com/docs/white/langenv/.
....proposed in the Realtime Speci cation for Java are of general interest to any real time synchronization system where hard real time tasks have to synchronize with soft or even non real time tasks. Java was originally designed by Sun to facilitate the development of embedded system software [8], it was designed more to simplify programming than to enable programmers to write software that complies reliably with real time constraints. In order to facilitate its major goal of operating system and hardware independence, in areas such as thread behavior, synchronization, interrupts, memory ....
J. Gosling and H. McGilton. The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. SUN Microsystems, Inc., 1995.
....modules on packages from the industry standard UML. We formalise the introduced concepts using Z. 1 Introduction When an OO model (or program) is constructed, a set of classes is the end result of an analysis of the problem domain. See [RBP 91, Mey97, Boo91, GJM91, UML99] and [Str97, GM95] for details. When classes are conceptually related, or may not be accessible to all other classes of the model, they are placed into distinct modules. These class modules make the structure of the model explicit and can be used for the desired encapsulation. Limited visibility of classes is used ....
James Gosling and Henry McGilton. The Java Language Environment: a white paper. Sun Microsystems, oct 1995.
....that can be described as an entity that performs inferential (i.e. deductive) symbolic reasonings. # Environment: along this dimension, an agent is defined on the basis of the software and hardware tools exploited for its development and operation. For example, an agent can be defined as a Java [63] object that is instanced from a Java class and that requires, for its execution, a Java Virtual Machine. # Application: along this dimension, an agent is defined on the basis of the application it addresses. For example, an agent can be defined as a a personal assistant who is collaborating ....
....recognition and of reasoning about implications of actions on other agents [47, 48] Concordia [125] is a framework for developing and executing highly mobile software agents and multiagent systems. Concordia extends Java; in fact a Concordia agent is an object instanced from an extended Java [63] class that inherits features from ancestor predefined classes. Concordia is based on a set of servers, each one composed of interacting components. These components are devoted to support: # mobility of agents from one server to another, mobility is based on the concept of itinerary, namely on a ....
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J. Gosling and H. McGilton. The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. Sun Microsystems, 1995.
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James Gosling and Henry McGilton, "The Java language environment: A white paper," Technical report, Sun Microsystems, 1996.
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Gosling, J., McGilton, H.: The Java Language Environment: A White Paper, October 95
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J. Gosling and H. McGilton. The java language environment white paper, 1996.
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James Gosling and Henry McGilton. The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. Technical report, Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, California, October 1995.
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J. Gosling, H. McGilton, "The Java language environment: A White paper," Technical Report, Sun Microsystems Computer Company, 1996.
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J. Gosling and H. McGilton. The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. Technical report, Sun Microsystems, May 1996.
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Gosling, J. and H. McGilton, The Java Language Environment: A White Paper. 1995, Sun Microsystems: Mountain View, CA.
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