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UBC Theses and Dissertations

A framework for multiparty communication types Keppitiyagama, Chamath Indika

Abstract

There are large number of communication paradigms such as multicast and anycast that are useful for distributed applications. The spectrum of such communication paradigms is larger than immediately apparent from the names used to identify these communication paradigms. None of these communication paradigms are universally available in the global Internet. To use these paradigms in applications programmers have to compose them using point-to-point communication or use third party modules that do so. Application level overlay networks have been used to implement some of these communication paradigms. These works indicate the vast design space behind the implementation of each of these multiparty communication paradigms over the wide area Internet. Application programmers should be able to make use of communication paradigms independent of their implementations and the implementors of communication paradigms should be able to explore the design space of implementing them. The lack of three components inhibits achieving these goals; a naming system that can accommodate current and future communication paradigms, a common application programmer's interface (API), and a system to deploy the implementations of communication paradigms. This dissertation describes a framework named MayaJala, based on the novel notion of multiparty communication types, that addresses these issues; multiparty communication types are the precisely defined counterparts of multiparty communication paradigms. MayaJala consists of two main components; a communication type system and a middleware system. The multiparty communication type system provides a mechanism to precisely identify communication paradigms. It also provides the ability to explore useful properties such as the equivalence of two communication types and conformance of one communication type to another. This allows applications to use different implementations of conforming communication types and not just different implementations of a single communication type. The multiparty communication type system also yields a common and simple interface sufficient for all the communication types. The middleware allows dynamic deployment of implementations transparent to the applications and also provides common functionality required by these implementations. The middleware provides support to implement communication types using application-level overlay networks. The middleware, together with the idea of multiparty communication types, facilitates the deployment of implementations of communication types without any coordination of the processes that participate in a session. This work shows that it is possible to provide a naming system, and a simple and common API for multiparty communication paradigms without restricting or standardizing the set of such communication paradigms. This is achieved through the notion of multiparty communication types. This work also shows that multiparty communication types can be deployed without any coordination from the processes participating in a session. MayaJala provides these facilities with a minimum overhead to the applications that use it.

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