Operating system support for planetary-scale network services. Bavier, A., Bowman, M., Chun, B., Culler, D., Karlin, S., Muir, S., Peterson, L., Roscoe, T., Spalink, T., & Wawrzoniak, M. 2004.
Paper abstract bibtex PlanetLab is a geographically distributed overlay network designed to support the deployment and evaluation of planetary-scale network services. Two high-level goals shape its design. First, to enable a large research community to share the infrastructure, PlanetLab provides distributed virtualization, whereby each service runs in an isolated slice of PlanetLab\textquoterights global resources. Second, to support competition among multiple network services, PlanetLab decouples the operating system running on each node from the network-wide services that define PlanetLab, a principle referred to as unbundled management. This paper describes how Planet-Lab realizes the goals of distributed virtualization and unbundled management, with a focus on the OS running on each node.
@conference {1251194,
title = {Operating system support for planetary-scale network services},
booktitle = {NSDI{\textquoteright}04: Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation},
year = {2004},
pages = {19{\textendash}19},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
organization = {USENIX Association},
address = {Berkeley, CA, USA},
abstract = {PlanetLab is a geographically distributed overlay network designed to support the deployment and evaluation of planetary-scale network services. Two high-level goals shape its design. First, to enable a large research community to share the infrastructure, PlanetLab provides distributed virtualization, whereby each service runs in an isolated slice of PlanetLab{\textquoteright}s global resources. Second, to support competition among multiple network services, PlanetLab decouples the operating system running on each node from the network-wide services that define PlanetLab, a principle referred to as unbundled management. This paper describes how Planet-Lab realizes the goals of distributed virtualization and unbundled management, with a focus on the OS running on each node.},
keywords = {overlay networks},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1251175.1251194$\#$},
author = {Bavier, Andy and Bowman, Mic and Chun, Brent and Culler, David and Karlin, Scott and Muir, Steve and Peterson, Larry and Roscoe, Timothy and Spalink, Tammo and Wawrzoniak, Mike}
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"MSC4o9qAhLXmS5th5","bibbaseid":"bavier-bowman-chun-culler-karlin-muir-peterson-roscoe-etal-operatingsystemsupportforplanetaryscalenetworkservices-2004","downloads":0,"creationDate":"2018-07-03T04:50:27.377Z","title":"Operating system support for planetary-scale network services","author_short":["Bavier, A.","Bowman, M.","Chun, B.","Culler, D.","Karlin, S.","Muir, S.","Peterson, L.","Roscoe, T.","Spalink, T.","Wawrzoniak, M."],"year":2004,"bibtype":"conference","biburl":"https://gnunet.org/bibliography/export/bibtex","bibdata":{"bibtype":"conference","type":"conference","title":"Operating system support for planetary-scale network services","booktitle":"NSDI\\textquoteright04: Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation","year":"2004","pages":"19\\textendash19","publisher":"USENIX Association","organization":"USENIX Association","address":"Berkeley, CA, USA","abstract":"PlanetLab is a geographically distributed overlay network designed to support the deployment and evaluation of planetary-scale network services. Two high-level goals shape its design. First, to enable a large research community to share the infrastructure, PlanetLab provides distributed virtualization, whereby each service runs in an isolated slice of PlanetLab\\textquoterights global resources. Second, to support competition among multiple network services, PlanetLab decouples the operating system running on each node from the network-wide services that define PlanetLab, a principle referred to as unbundled management. This paper describes how Planet-Lab realizes the goals of distributed virtualization and unbundled management, with a focus on the OS running on each node.","keywords":"overlay networks","url":"http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1251175.1251194$#$","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Bavier"],"firstnames":["Andy"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Bowman"],"firstnames":["Mic"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Chun"],"firstnames":["Brent"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Culler"],"firstnames":["David"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Karlin"],"firstnames":["Scott"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Muir"],"firstnames":["Steve"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Peterson"],"firstnames":["Larry"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Roscoe"],"firstnames":["Timothy"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Spalink"],"firstnames":["Tammo"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Wawrzoniak"],"firstnames":["Mike"],"suffixes":[]}],"bibtex":"@conference {1251194,\n\ttitle = {Operating system support for planetary-scale network services},\n\tbooktitle = {NSDI{\\textquoteright}04: Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation},\n\tyear = {2004},\n\tpages = {19{\\textendash}19},\n\tpublisher = {USENIX Association},\n\torganization = {USENIX Association},\n\taddress = {Berkeley, CA, USA},\n\tabstract = {PlanetLab is a geographically distributed overlay network designed to support the deployment and evaluation of planetary-scale network services. Two high-level goals shape its design. First, to enable a large research community to share the infrastructure, PlanetLab provides distributed virtualization, whereby each service runs in an isolated slice of PlanetLab{\\textquoteright}s global resources. Second, to support competition among multiple network services, PlanetLab decouples the operating system running on each node from the network-wide services that define PlanetLab, a principle referred to as unbundled management. This paper describes how Planet-Lab realizes the goals of distributed virtualization and unbundled management, with a focus on the OS running on each node.},\n\tkeywords = {overlay networks},\n\turl = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1251175.1251194$\\#$},\n\tauthor = {Bavier, Andy and Bowman, Mic and Chun, Brent and Culler, David and Karlin, Scott and Muir, Steve and Peterson, Larry and Roscoe, Timothy and Spalink, Tammo and Wawrzoniak, Mike}\n}\n","author_short":["Bavier, A.","Bowman, M.","Chun, B.","Culler, D.","Karlin, S.","Muir, S.","Peterson, L.","Roscoe, T.","Spalink, T.","Wawrzoniak, M."],"key":"1251194","id":"1251194","bibbaseid":"bavier-bowman-chun-culler-karlin-muir-peterson-roscoe-etal-operatingsystemsupportforplanetaryscalenetworkservices-2004","role":"author","urls":{"Paper":"http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1251175.1251194$#$"},"keyword":["overlay networks"],"downloads":0},"search_terms":["operating","system","support","planetary","scale","network","services","bavier","bowman","chun","culler","karlin","muir","peterson","roscoe","spalink","wawrzoniak"],"keywords":["overlay networks"],"authorIDs":[],"dataSources":["FWsPTwsmjtrBtRS3B"]}