Title
Tutorial: event-based systems meet software-defined networking
Abstract
Software-defined networking (SDN) is a recent development in the area of communication networks with tremendous support by key players building the next generation of computer hardware and software. This development will have significant impact on how communication middleware---in particular, future distributed event-based systems---can be designed. While currently the communication middleware has no possibility to directly influence the properties of its underlying communication channels on the network layer, SDN enables communication middleware to control and flexibly adapt the forwarding of communication flows in the underlying network. In addition to the immediate implication to local area networks such as data center networks, campus networks, or company networks, novel trends like network virtualization may even support Internet-wide distributed applications to benefit from SDN in the future. This paper gives an introduction on how to utilize SDN-concepts for improving the performance of event-based middleware and to test their behavior.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1145/2488222.2488270
DEBS
Keywords
Field
DocType
campus network,company network,software-defined network,event-based middleware,underlying communication channel,communication middleware,communication flow,event-based system,data center network,communication network,local area network,publish subscribe,software defined networking
Middleware,Telecommunications network,Computer science,Computer network,Real-time computing,Software,Local area network,Software-defined networking,Network virtualization,Data center,Broadcast communication network,Distributed computing
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
4
0.44
18
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Boris Koldehofe168452.97
Frank Dürr250043.83
Muhammad Adnan Tariq323419.07