Treffer: Process migration

Title:
Process migration
Source:
ACM Computing Surveys ; volume 32, issue 3, page 241-299 ; ISSN 0360-0300 1557-7341
Publisher Information:
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication Year:
2000
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift article in journal/newspaper
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1145/367701.367728
Accession Number:
edsbas.38EAA3BA
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

Process migration is the act of transferring a process between two machines. It enables dynamic load distribution, fault resilience, eased system administration, and data access locality. Despite these goals and ongoing research efforts, migration has not achieved widespread use. With the increasing deployment of distributed systems in general, and distributed operating systems in particular, process migration is again receiving more attention in both research and product development. As high-performance facilities shift from supercomputers to networks of workstations, and with the ever-increasing role of the World Wide Web, we expect migration to play a more important role and eventually to be widely adopted. This survey reviews the field of process migration by summarizing the key concepts and giving an overview of the most important implementations. Design and implementation issues of process migration are analyzed in general, and then revisited for each of the case studies described: MOSIX, Sprite, Mach, and Load Sharing Facility. The benefits and drawbacks of process migration depend on the details of implementation and, therefore, this paper focuses on practical matters. This survey will help in understanding the potentials of process migration and why it has not caught on.