Affiliation:
1. Univ. of Maryland, College Park
Abstract
We describe a system called POLYLITH that helps programmers prepare and interconnect mixed-language software components for execution in heterogeneous environments. POLYLITH's principal benefit is that programmers are free to implement functional requirements separately from their treatment of interfacing requirements; this means that once an application has been developed for use in one execution environment (such as a distributed network) it can be adapted for reuse in other environments (such as a shared-memory multiprocessor) by automatic techniques. This flexibility is provided without loss of performance. We accomplish this by creating a new run-time organization for software. An abstract decoupling agent, called the
software bus
, is introduced between the system components. Heterogeneity in language and architecture is accommodated since program units are prepared to interface directly to the bus and not to other program units. Programmers specify application structure in terms of a module interconnection language (MIL); POLYLITH uses this specification to guide
packaging
(static interfacing activities such as stub generation, source program adaptation, compilation, and linking). At run time, an implementation of the bus abstraction may assist in message delivery, name service, or system reconfiguration.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Reference41 articles.
1. Developing applications for ~heterogeneous machine networks: The Durra environment;BRBACCI M.;Comput. Syst.,1989
2. Lightweight remote procedure call
3. The V distributed system
4. Programming-in-the-large versus programming-in-the- ~small;DEREMER F.;IEEE Trans. Softw. Eng.,1976
Cited by
84 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献