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Publications

Publications by José Orlando Pereira

2012

Editorial message: Middleware for Next Generation Internet Computing (MW4NG) Workshop 2012

Authors
Goschka, KM; Tosic, V; Pereira, JO; Hung, PCK;

Publication
Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on Middleware for Next Generation Internet Computing, MW4NG 2012 - Co-located with the 13th ACM/IFIP/USENIX International Middleware Conference, Middleware 2012

Abstract

2010

StAN: exploiting shared interests without disclosing them in gossip-based publish/subscribe

Authors
Matos, M; Nunes, A; Oliveira, R; Pereira, J;

Publication
Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Peer-to-peer systems, IPTPS'10, San Jose, CA, USA, April 27, 2010

Abstract
Publish/subscribe mechanisms for scalable event dissemination are a core component of many distributed systems ranging from Enterprise Application Integration middleware to news dissemination in the Internet. Hence, a lot of research has been done on overlay networks for efficient decentralized topic-based routing. Specifically, in gossip-based dissemination, bringing nodes with shared interests closer in the overlay makes dissemination more efficient. Unfortunately, this usually requires fully disclosing interests to nearby nodes and impacts reliability due to clustering. In this paper we address this by starting with multiple overlays, one for each topic subscribed, that then separately self-organize to maximize the number of shared physical links, thereby leading to reduced message traffic and maintenance overhead. This is achieved without disclosing a node's topic subscription to any node that isn't subscribed to the same topic and without impacting the robustness of the overlay. Besides presenting the overlay management protocol, we evaluate it using simulation in order to validate our results. © IPTPS 2010.All right reserved.

2006

A pragmatic protocol for database replication in interconnected clusters

Authors
Grov, J; Soares, L; Jr., AC; Pereira, J; Oliveira, RC; Pedone, F;

Publication
12th Pacific Rim International Symposium on Dependable Computing, Proceedings

Abstract
Multi-master update everywhere database replication, as achieved by protocols based on group communication such as DBSM and Postgres-R, addresses both performance and availability. By scaling it to wide area networks, one could save costly bandwidth and avoid large round-trips to a distant master server Also, by ensuring that updates are safely stored at a remote site within transaction boundaries, disaster recovery is guaranteed. Unfortunately, scaling existing cluster based replication protocols is troublesome. In this paper we present a database replication protocol based on group communication that targets interconnected clusters. In contrast with previous proposals, it uses a separate multicast group for each cluster and thus does not impose any additional requirements on group communication, easing implementation and deployment in a rea setting. Nonetheless, the protocol ensures one-copy equivalence while allowing all sites to execute update transactions. Experimental evaluation using the workload of the industry standard TPC-C benchmark confirms the advantages of the approach.

2004

Low latency probabilistic broadcast in Wide Area Networks

Authors
Pereira, JO; Rodrigues, L; Pinto, AS; Oliveira, RC;

Publication
23RD IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON RELIABLE DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS, PROCEEDINGS

Abstract
In this paper we propose a novel probabilistic broadcast protocol that reduces the average end-to-end latency by dynamically adapting to network topology and traffic conditions. It does so by using an unique strategy that consists in adjusting the fanout and preferred targets for different gossip rounds as a function of the properties of each node. Node classification is light-weight and integrated in the protocol membership management. Furthermore, each node is not required to have full knowledge of the group membership or of the network topology. The paper shows how the protocol can be configured and evaluates its performance with a detailed simulation model.

2011

Assessing NoSQL Databases for Telecom Applications

Authors
Cruz, F; Gomes, P; Oliveira, R; Pereira, J;

Publication
13TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMMERCE AND ENTERPRISE COMPUTING (CEC 2011)

Abstract
The constant evolution of access technologies are turning Internet access more ubiquitous, faster, better and cheaper. In connection with the proliferation of Internet access, Cloud Computing is changing the way users look at data, moving from local applications and installations to remote services, accessible from any device. This new paradigm presents numerous opportunities that even traditional businesses like telecoms cannot ignore, in particular, enabling new and more cost effective solutions to old problems. The work presented in this paper provides a detailed description of how a telecom application can be migrated to a NoSQL database. Particularly, by pointing out the necessary change of how we reason about data as well as the data structures that support it, in order to take full advantage of Cloud Computing. In addition, we also present a preliminary evaluation of different data persistency paradigms based on a fully tunable simulation platform that mimics the operation of a telecom business.

2000

Mobile Transaction Management in Mobisnap

Authors
Preguiça, NM; Baquero, C; Moura, F; Martins, JL; Oliveira, RC; Domingos, HJL; Pereira, JO; Duarte, S;

Publication
Current Issues in Databases and Information Systems, East-European Conference on Advances in Databases and Information Systems Held Jointly with International Conference on Database Systems for Advanced Applications, ADBIS-DASFAA 2000, Prague, Czech Republic, September 5-8, 2000, Proceedings

Abstract
In this paper we describe a transaction management system designed to face the inherent characteristics of mobile environments. Mobile clients cache subsets of the database state and allow disconnected users to perform transactions independently. Transactions are specified as mobile transactional programs that are propagated and executed in the server, thus allowing the validation of transactions based on application-specific semantics. In the proposed model (as in others previously presented in literature) the final result of a transaction is only determined when the transaction is processed in the central server. Users may be notified of the results of their transactions using system support (even when they are no longer using the same application or even the same computer). Additionally, the system implements a reservation mechanism in order to guarantee the results of transactions performed in disconnected computers. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2000.

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