Distributed Processing Involving Personal Computers and Mainframe Hosts
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
- Vol. 3 (3), 479-489
- https://doi.org/10.1109/JSAC.1985.1146220
Abstract
This paper surveys some of the issues involved in building useful distributed systems involving PC's and hosts. Alternative communications techniques for micro-mainframe communication are compared. The point of view is presented that the PC user should be provided with a unified view of the heterogeneous distributed system to which he is connected. The proposed method is to formalize the notion of a service request and provide distributed services by function shipping service requests to remote nodes able to provide the service, e.g., personal computers will ship requests which they cannot satisfy locally to hosts on the network. Providing a unified view of data which allows PC application programs to access files on mainframes is an example of a service which can be built by intercepting and shipping service requests. Examples from current IBM products are used to illustrate approaches. The views presented are the authors' own, based on systems research in progress at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Directions in cooperative processing between workstations and hostsIBM Systems Journal, 1984
- The LOCUS distributed operating systemACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 1983
- Advanced program-to-program communication in SNAIBM Systems Journal, 1983
- LOCUS a network transparent, high reliability distributed systemACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 1981