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Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Bio-Inspired Models of Network Information and Computing Systems 2007
DOI: 10.4108/icst.bionetics2007.2341
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Autonomic Reliable Multicast Application-Level Group Communication Using Self-Organization Principles

Abstract: We present a mechanism for reliable multicast based on autonomic principles (AutoRM). So-called Beamon nodes exchange information in a peer-to-peer manner, deriving a subjective view of the environment. Applications connect to a Beamon network to participate in reliable communication within groups they declare to be joined to. This short paper describes the general AutoRM concepts, the architecture and protocols used between application and Beamon, as well as between the nodes themselves.

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The second is a direct message-passing mechanism, allowing for flexible contracting service usage. This mechanism supports bilateral and multilateral communication along previously defined connection partners and allows various properties to be implemented, such as encryption or fixed-numberof-participants constraint [25]. The combined use of all of the aforementioned mechanisms allows ACEs to dynamically and adaptively connect with each other to provide advanced autonomic services.…”
Section: A Autonomic Communication Elementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second is a direct message-passing mechanism, allowing for flexible contracting service usage. This mechanism supports bilateral and multilateral communication along previously defined connection partners and allows various properties to be implemented, such as encryption or fixed-numberof-participants constraint [25]. The combined use of all of the aforementioned mechanisms allows ACEs to dynamically and adaptively connect with each other to provide advanced autonomic services.…”
Section: A Autonomic Communication Elementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Publications detailing the implementation of autonomic properties (often referred to as self-* properties) for specific distributed systems, frameworks, or middleware technologies are too many to list in this paper. A small (subjective) selection must suffice: Group communication is well researched, an adaptation to autonomic systems (using a declarative approach to group membership) and an overview of the state of the art can be found in one of our recent publications [11], the notion of contracts has been adapted to network management by J. Strassner [12], and a significant contribution is found in the article by K. Calvert and J. Griffioen et al regarding network management through a collective of interacting entities [13].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%