Grid Computing — GRID 2001: Second International Workshop Denver, CO, USA, November 12, 2001 Proceedings

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The term "grid computing" is based on an analogy with the electrical power grid: computing capabilities should be ubiquitous and easy to use. While the development of what we now call grid computing is, in many ways, part of a natural progression of work done in the last decade, what's special about it is that all of its enabling technologies are converging at once: (1) a widely - ployed, network infrastructure will connect virtually every device in the world, (2) an interface technology is widely understood and embraced by virtually every segment of science, technology, commerce, and society, and (3) there is a wi- spread, and growing, understanding of the properties, capabilities, and services that are necessary and possible to utilize this infrastructure. Information services and resource brokers will allow the dynamic sharing of resources for applications large and small and enable virtual organizations. These properties, capabilities, and services will be used in different contexts to enable different styles of c- puting such as Internet computing and Peer-to-Peer computing. To facilitate the adoption of standard practices, the Global Grid Forum (www. gridforum. org) was formed to identify common requirements and push for eventual standardization. The phenomenal growth of grid computing and related topics has created the need for this workshop as a venue to present the latest research. This year's workshop builds on the success of last year's.

Author(s): Dennis Gannon (auth.), Craig A. Lee (eds.)
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2242
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2001

Language: English
Pages: 188
Tags: Computer Communication Networks; Programming Techniques; Software Engineering; Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters; Operating Systems

Grid Application Design Using Software Components and Web Services....Pages 1-1
Design and Implementation of a CORBA Commodity Grid Kit....Pages 2-13
Towards High Performance CORBA and MPI Middlewares for Grid Computing....Pages 14-25
An Integrated Grid Environment for Component Applications....Pages 26-37
KNOWLEDGE GRID: High Performance Knowledge Discovery Services on the Grid....Pages 38-50
On Fully Decentralized Resource Discovery in Grid Environments....Pages 51-62
An Adaptive Service Grid Architecture Using Dynamic Replica Management....Pages 63-74
Identifying Dynamic Replication Strategies for a High-Performance Data Grid....Pages 75-86
Ensemble Scheduling: Resource Co-Allocation on the Computational Grid....Pages 87-98
JobQueue: A Computational Grid-Wide Queuing System....Pages 99-110
A Scheduling Model for Grid Computing Systems....Pages 111-123
Exposed versus Encapsulated Approaches to Grid Service Architecture....Pages 124-132
A Methodology for Account Management in Grid Computing Environments....Pages 133-144
Policy Engine: A Framework for Authorization, Accounting Policy Specification and Evaluation in Grids....Pages 145-153
Performance Contracts: Predicting and Monitoring Grid Application Behavior....Pages 154-165
Production-Level Distributed Parametric Study Capabilities for the Grid....Pages 166-176
The DO Experiment Data Grid—SAM....Pages 177-184