scholarly journals SFDDM: A Secure Distributed Database Management in Combined Fog-to-Cloud Systems

Author(s):  
Souvik Sengupta ◽  
Sarang Kahvazadeh ◽  
Xavi Masip-Bruin ◽  
Jordi Garcia
1986 ◽  
Vol SE-12 (4) ◽  
pp. 511-520
Author(s):  
Masahiro Tsuchiya ◽  
Michael P. Mariani ◽  
James D. Brom

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shereen Ismail ◽  
Eman AlKhader ◽  
Aydan Gasimova ◽  
Hassan Reza

Author(s):  
Ismail Omar Hababeh ◽  
Muthu Ramachandran

Database technology has been a significant field to work in for developing real life applications in network information systems. An enterprise’s reliance on its network and database applications in Distributed Database Management systems (DDBMS) environment is likely to continue growing exponentially. In such a system the estimation and prediction of Quality of Service (QoS) performance improvements are crucial since it increases understanding the issues that affect the distributed database networking system behaviour; like database fragmentation, clustering database network sites, and data allocation and replication that would reduce the amount of irrelevant data and speed up the transactions response time. This chapter introduces the trends of database management systems DBMS and presents an integrated method for designing Distributed Relational networking Database Management System DRDBMS that efficiently and effectively achieves the objectives of database fragmentation, clustering database network sites, and fragments allocation and replication. It is based on high speed partitioning, clustering, and data allocation techniques that minimize the data fragments accessed and data transferred through the network sites, maximize the overall system throughput by increasing the degree of concurrent transactions processing of multiple fragments located in different sites, and result in better QoS design and decision support.


Author(s):  
Rashed Mustafa ◽  
Md Javed Hossain ◽  
Thomas Chowdhury

Distributed Database Management System (DDBMS) is one of the prime concerns in distributed computing. The driving force of development of DDBMS is the demand of the applications that need to query very large databases (order of terabytes). Traditional Client- Server database systems are too slower to handle such applications. This paper presents a better way to find the optimal number of nodes in a distributed database management systems. Keywords: DDBMS, Data Fragmentation, Linear Search, RMI.   DOI: 10.3329/diujst.v4i2.4362 Daffodil International University Journal of Science and Technology Vol.4(2) 2009 pp.19-22


CISM journal ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.C. Lee ◽  
J.D. McLaughlin

This paper explores the major database management issues related to distributed land information networks. Recent developments in distributed database management are first reviewed; then special problems unique to the handling of spatial data are addressed. Lastly, this paper speculates on the future of distributed land information systems.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document