Journal of Computer & Information Technology

Distributed remote method invocation

Author:
1Anil Rajput, 2Neeraj Bhargava 3Hemraj Singh Thakur, 4Manmohan Singh and 5Shivshakti Shrivastav
Affiliation:

1Head of Department Maths & Computer Science , Sadhuvasvani Collgeg Bhopal India

2Head of Department Computer Application MDS UniversityAjmer Rajasthan India

3Lecturer ,Department of Computer Science Kendriya Vidhyalaya Jaipur India

4Lecturer, Department of Computer Science BIST Bhopal India

5Lecturer, Department of Computer Application SCOPE Bhopal MP India

 

Keyword:
Remote method invocation, Object request broker, Inter-object communication, Distributed embedded computer systems, Distributed object models, data mining AI
Issue Date:
April 2010
Abstract:
An emerging trend in the Signal and Image Processing (SIP) community is the appearance of middleware and middleware standards that can be readily exploited for distributed computing applications by the SIP community. High performance computing and High Performance Embedded Computing (HPEC) applications will benefit significantly from highly efficient & portable computational middleware for signal & image processing. Open middleware standards such as VSIPL, MPI, CORBA, Data mining RMI, and Web Services (based on SOAP/XML), offer a unique opportunity for the rapid development of easily maintained HPEC codes that combine portability and flexibility across a number of applications This middleware infrastructure will support the rapid development and deployment of portable, efficient, SIP critical applications that will be of immediate benefit to many. The use of distributed computing technologies for problem solving has been around for many years. The early paradigm of distributed computing has been that of remote procedure calls (RPC). However, in recent years, this paradigm has shifted to the use of remote objects due to the acceptance of object oriented programming practices. Even today web services are built around the concept of messaging and frequently these messages take the form of request/response-type remote procedure calls on remote objects. The existing and emerging standards for performing distributed computing have resulted in several possible middleware choices for the SIP community. This paper focuses on three specific middleware standards for distributed computing, namely: the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA). 
Pages:
ISSN:
2455-9997 (Online) - 2229-3531 (Print)
Source:
DOI:

Copy the following to cite this article:

Copy the following to cite this URL:

Available from: http://www.compitjournal.org/paper/321/

Ansari Education And Research Society
Facebook Google Plus Twitter