Foundations of Dependable Computing Paradigms for Dependable Applications

Foundations of Dependable Computing Paradigms for Dependable Applications by Gary M. Koob, published by Springer US on May 17, 2013, is a softcover reprint of the original 1st edition from 1994, comprising 214 pages. This book presents various approaches aimed at achieving dependability at the application level, informed by higher-level fault models and lower-level abstractions discussed in its companion volumes. It explores how dependability can be tailored to meet the specific requirements of applications, fault environments, and target platforms.
Readers will find a detailed examination of three classes of paradigms: protocol-based paradigms for distributed applications, algorithm-based paradigms for parallel applications, and methods for leveraging application semantics in embedded real-time control systems. The book also addresses the necessary models and analysis methods for designing and validating dependable systems, alongside discussions on system infrastructure that supports these paradigms. By focusing on practical solutions that balance cost and performance with dependability, this work provides insights into innovative compiler support and fault detection mechanisms across various system levels.
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Foundations of Dependable Computing: Paradigms for Dependable Applications, presents a variety of specific approaches to achieving dependability at the application level. Driven by the higher level fault models of Models and Frameworks for Dependable Systems, and built on the lower level abstractions implemented in a third companion book subtitled System Implementation, these approaches demonstrate how dependability may be tuned to the requirements of an application, the fault environment, and the characteristics of the target platform. Three classes of paradigms are considered: protocol-based paradigms for distributed applications, algorithm-based paradigms for parallel applications, and approaches to exploiting application semantics in embedded real-time control systems.
The companion volume subtitled Models and Frameworks for Dependable Systems presents two comprehensive frameworks for reasoning about system dependability, thereby establishing a context for understanding the roles played by specific approaches presented in this book’s two companion volumes. It then explores the range of models and analysis methods necessary to design, validate and analyze dependable systems.
Another companion book (published by Kluwer) subtitled System Implementation, explores the system infrastructure needed to support the various paradigms of Paradigms for Dependable Applications. Approaches to implementing support mechanisms and to incorporating additional appropriate levels of fault detection and fault tolerance at the processor, network, and operating system level are presented. A primary concern at these levels is balancing cost and performance against coverage and overall dependability. As these chapters demonstrate, low overhead, practical solutions are attainable and not necessarily incompatible with performance considerations. The section on innovative compiler support, in particular, demonstrates how the benefits of application specificity may be obtained while reducing hardware cost and run-time overhead.
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