A centralized data access model for grid computing

Author(s):  
P. Andrews ◽  
T. Sherwin ◽  
B. Banister
Author(s):  
Gabriel Antoniu ◽  
Eddy Caron ◽  
Frédéric Desprez ◽  
Aurélia Fèvre ◽  
Mathieu Jan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Gianni Pucciani ◽  
Flavia Donno ◽  
Andrea Domenici ◽  
Heinz Stockinger

Data replication is a well-known technique used in distributed systems in order to improve fault tolerance and make data access faster. Several copies of a dataset are created and placed at different nodes, so that users can access the replica closest to them, and at the same time the data access load is distributed among the replicas. In today’s Grid middleware solutions, data management services allow users to replicate datasets (i.e., flat files or databases) among storage elements within a Grid, but replicas are often considered read-only because of the absence of mechanisms able to propagate updates and enforce replica consistency. This entry analyzes the replica consistency problem and provides hints for the development of a Replica Consistency Service, highlighting the main issues and pros and cons of several approaches.


Author(s):  
Oveeyen Moonian ◽  
Kavi Kumar Khedo ◽  
Shakuntala Baichoo ◽  
Razvi Doomun ◽  
Sudha Cheerkoot-Jalim ◽  
...  

Computers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Thibaud Ecarot ◽  
Benoît Fraikin ◽  
Luc Lavoie ◽  
Mark McGilchrist ◽  
Jean-François Ethier

Given the ever-growing body of knowledge, healthcare improvement hinges more than ever on efficient knowledge transfer to clinicians and patients. Promoted initially by the Institute of Medicine, the Learning Health System (LHS) framework emerged in the early 2000s. It places focus on learning cycles where care delivery is tightly coupled with research activities, which in turn is closely tied to knowledge transfer, ultimately injecting solid improvements into medical practice. Sensitive health data access across multiple organisations is therefore paramount to support LHSs. While the LHS vision is well established, security requirements to support them are not. Health data exchange approaches have been implemented (e.g., HL7 FHIR) or proposed (e.g., blockchain-based methods), but none cover the entire LHS requirement spectrum. To address this, the Sensitive Data Access Model (SDAM) is proposed. Using a representation of agents and processes of data access systems, specific security requirements are presented and the SDAM layer architecture is described, with an emphasis on its mix-network dynamic topology approach. A clinical application benefiting from the model is subsequently presented and an analysis evaluates the security properties and vulnerability mitigation strategies offered by a protocol suite following SDAM and in parallel, by FHIR.


2013 ◽  
Vol 846-847 ◽  
pp. 1789-1792
Author(s):  
Qing Song Zhang

This paper introduced the design process and function realization of the foreign language digital library. The system took Brower/server as web access model, Tomcat as Web server and SQL Server 2000 as data access software. The web function implement of system was developed by using the technique of JSP and JDBC.


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