Title of article
Strong Mobility in Mobile Haskell
Author/Authors
Du Bois, Andre Rauber Universidade Catolica de Pelotas - Escola de Informatica, Brazil , Trinder, Phil , Loidl, Hans-Wolfgang
From page
868
To page
884
Abstract
In a mobile language, computations can move between locations in a network to better utilise resources, e.g., as in a computational GRID. Mobile Haskell, or mHaskell, is a small extension of Concurrent Haskell that enables the construction of distributed mobile software by introducing higher order communication channels called Mobile Channels (MChannels). mHaskell only provides weak mobility, i.e. the ability to start new computations on remote locations. This paper shows how strong mobility, i.e. the ability to migrate running threads between locations, can be implemented in a language like mHaskell with weak mobility, higher-order channels and first-class continuations. Using Haskell s high level features, such as higher-order functions, type classes and support for monadic programming, strong mobility is achieved without any changes to the runtime system, or built-in support for continuations. Strong mobility is illustrated with examples and a mobile agent case study
Keywords
Mobile Computation , Strong Mobility , Functional Programming , Haskell
Journal title
Journal of J.UCS (Journal of Universal Computer Science)
Journal title
Journal of J.UCS (Journal of Universal Computer Science)
Record number
2660615
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