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[PhD Thesis] Dependability and the Management of Large Distributed Systems

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Abstract

This thesis concerns the design, implementation and application of a dependable management information systems to aid in the controlling (monitoring) of large, complex distributed computer systems. Special attention has been given to using a person centred model of an organisation based on the ANSA "Enterprise Projection" and using fault tolerance techniques to provide continued service and recovery in the event of partial sub-system failure. The information system is accessed using "management workbenches" (implemented in Tcl/Tk) which access managed resources using "probes" (implemented in C++). Existing "legacy systems" are incorporated in the prototype using "integration objects" which "wrap" system software, entry routines, configuration files etc. and enact operation upon logical (physical) resources. Application layer fault tolerance and recovery is implemented using type inheritance whereas remote operations are performed using the Arjuna tool kit. The prototype information system was used to "manage" several resources including: workstations (running SunOS, Solaris and HP-UX), terminals, printers, disk and tape devices as well as software distribution. A mechanism for re-configuring multiple resources (such as workstation clusters and dedicated devices) based on "dependable change schedules" is presented and applied to change and fault management.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Hodge DR

Publication type: Report

Publication status: Published

Series Title:

Year: 1996

Institution: Department of Computing Science, University of Newcastle upon Tyne

Place Published: Newcastle upon Tyne

Notes: British Lending Library DSC stock location number: DXN008487


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