Author :
Benza, Didier ; Cosnard, Michel ; Liquori, Luigi ; Vesin, Marc
Abstract :
We design a lightweight overlay network, called Arigatoni, that is suitable to deploy the global computing paradigm over the Internet. Communications over the behavioral units of the model are performed by a simple communication protocol. Basic global computers can communicate by first registering to a brokering service and then by mutually asking and offering services, in a way that is reminiscent to Rapoport\´s "tit-for-tat" strategy of cooperation based on reciprocity. In the model, resources are encapsulated in the administrative domain in which they reside, and requests for resources located in another administrative domain traverse a broker-2-broker negotiation using classical PKI mechanisms. The model is suitable to fit with various global scenarios from classical P2P applications, like file sharing, or band-sharing, to more sophisticated grid applications, like remote and distributed big (and small) computations, to possible, futuristic real migrating computations. Indeed, our model fits some of the objectives suggested by the CoreGrid network of excellence, as described in Schwiegelshohn et al. (Schwiegelshohn et al., 2005)
Keywords :
Internet; protocols; resource allocation; telecommunication computing; Arigatoni; Internet; P2P application; PKI mechanism; broker-2-broker negotiation; brokering service; communication protocol; global computer communication; global computing paradigm; peer to peer computing; programmable overlay network; public key infrastructure; sophisticated grid application; Computer networks; Distributed computing; Grid computing; IP networks; International collaboration; Network topology; Peer to peer computing; Personal digital assistants; Protocols; Registers;