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Table 1: Kernel Module Interface rately dealt with by three modules in the design. The modules are: the kernel module, the policy module, and the transport module. Each module is self-contained and inter-module interaction is governed by well-de ned interfaces. Figure 1 il- lustrates a typical distribution of modules in a system.The decision to migrate a process is initiated by the policy module based on the information it has obtained from kernel modules on partici- pating machines. If, based on this information, a policy module decides to migrate a process, it will request the transport module to ship the process state.

in Micro-kernel Support for Migration
by Martin O'Connor, Brendan Tangney, Vinny Cahill, Neville Harris 1994
"... In PAGE 3: ... This module is also responsible for providing load information to policy modules to enable them to make migration decisions. Table1 details a sample interface to a kernel module. The GetConfiguration call is provided to enable policy modules to determine the con- guration of the kernel on their node.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table I. Examples of information seeking processes. Process Information Need Information Sources

in The state of the art in text filtering
by Douglas W. Oard 1997
Cited by 2

Table 2. Input and output information types of the direct sub-processes of the process elicitation.

in A Formal Knowledge Level Process Model Of Requirements Engineering
by Daniela E. Herlea, Catholijn M. Jonker, Jan Treur, Niek J. E. Wijngaards 1999
Cited by 2

Table 4. Input and output information types of the direct sub-processes of the process elicitation.

in A Compositional Knowledge Level Process Model of Requirements Engineering
by Daniela E. Herlea, Catholijn M. Jonker, Jan Treur, Niek J. E. Wijngaards 1999
Cited by 1

Table 8. Input and output information types of the direct sub-processes of the process reformulation of requirements.

in A Compositional Knowledge Level Process Model of Requirements Engineering
by Daniela E. Herlea, Catholijn M. Jonker, Jan Treur, Niek J. E. Wijngaards 1999
Cited by 1

Table 2. Input and output information types of the direct sub-processes of the process elicitation.

in A Formal Knowledge Level Process Model of Requirements Engineering
by Daniela E. Herlea, Catholijn M. Jonker, Jan Treur, Niek J. E. Wijngaards

Table 1. The breakdown of the thread process- ing time of each request (ms). Solaris Linux

in Difference of Degradation Schemes among Operating Systems: Experimental Analysis for Web Application Servers
by Hideaki Hibino, Kenichi Kourai, Shigeru Chiba 2005
"... In PAGE 5: ... In prex, however, since we cannot obtain such information, we determined the service executed for each section by whether the thread issued the open system call or not for reading a XML file. Table1 shows the breakdown of the thread processing time for each request to the light-weight service in Solaris and Linux. Of the total time, the running time was almost the same and these times are consumed primarily for ex- ecuting the Fibonacci calculation.... ..."
Cited by 6

Table 2: The processes and process categories.

in The Reliability of ISO/IEC PDTR 15504 Assessments
by Jean-martin Simon, Khaled El, Emam Sonia Rousseau, Eric Jacquet, Sanofi Recherche, Sanofi Pharma, Frederic Babey, Unité Conseil, Jean-martin Simon, Khaled El, Emam Sonia Rousseau, Sanofi Recherche, Sanofi Pharma, Unité Conseil
"... In PAGE 10: ... The way those two organisations should organise their Help Desk in order to provide the best quot;customer service quot; (CUS.5, see Table2 ) is completely different. For example: a) The first one established a service level agreement with dedicated resources and formal procedures to handle any request and to manage interviews and questionnaires to appraise user satisfaction.... ..."

Table 2. Albergate results with text process- ing.

in Tracing object-oriented code into functional requirements
by G. Antoniol, G. Canfora, G. Casazza, A. De Lucia, E. Merlo 2000
"... In PAGE 6: ... To mitigate the influence of these factors, we have im- proved the Identifiers Separation and Text Normalization activities as specified in the previous sections. As shown in Table2 , a dramatic improvement was achieved: the corre- sponding figures of Table 1 were increased of about 100%. All traceability links were recovered by considering the first six documents for each class.... ..."
Cited by 6

Table 1: Experimental conditions of speech process- ing.

in Evaluation of Direct Speech Translation Method Using Inductive Learning For Conversations In . . .
by Koji Murakami, Makoto Hiroshige, Kenji Araki, Koji Tochinai
"... In PAGE 3: ... It is assumed that acoustic characteristics are not dependent on any language. Table1 shows the conditions for speech analysis. The same conditions and the same kind of characteristic parameters of speech are used throughout the experiments.... ..."
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