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Determination of Time and Order for Event-Based Middleware in Mobile Peer-to-Peer Environments
Kauai Island, Hawaii March 08-March 12
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/PERCOMW.2005.27Third IEEE International Conference o ...
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Eiko Yoneki, University of Cambridge
Jean Bacon, University of Cambridge
An event correlation is becoming an important service in event-based middleware allowing subscribers in publish/subscribe paradigm to consume patterns of events (composite events). Recent evolution of wireless networks makes events flow from tiny sensor networks to Internet scale peer-to-peer systems among event broker grids. This new paradigm requires composition of events in heterogeneous network environments, where time synchronization and network conditions vary. Most extant approaches to define event correlation lacks a formal mechanism to define complex temporal relationships among correlated events. Here, we introduce generic composite events semantics introducing interval-based semantics for event detection supporting resource-constrained environments. We precisely define complex timing constraints among correlated event instances. We discuss underlying time systems and outline real-time temporal event ordering.
Citation:
Eiko Yoneki, Jean Bacon, "Determination of Time and Order for Event-Based Middleware in Mobile Peer-to-Peer Environments," percomw, pp.91-96, Third IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications Workshops (PERCOMW'05), 2005
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