Recent News
Partnering for success: Computer Science students represent UNM in NASA and Supercomputing Competitions
December 11, 2024
New associate dean interested in helping students realize their potential
August 6, 2024
Hand and Machine Lab researchers showcase work at Hawaii conference
June 13, 2024
Two from School of Engineering to receive local 40 Under 40 awards
April 18, 2024
News Archives
Monitoring and Adaptation for Large-scale Networked Systems
September 16, 2004
Date: Thursday September 16, 2004
Time: 11am-12:15pm
Location: Woodward 149
Partick G. Bridges <bridges@cs.unm.edu>
Department of Computer Science University of Nw Mexico
Abstract: Modern system software must deal with widely varying large-scale environments ranging from ad hoc networks of low-powered sensors to clusters of thousands of high-speed processors. On both ends of this spectrum, system scale presents a wide range of problems to operating system and networking software, and emerging hybrid systems will present an even more challenging environment for system software designers. In this talk, I will describe an potential large-scale system for monitoring and modelling forest fires, describe the research challenges it presents to system software designers, and describe three different networking-related projects that I and my students are working on to address some of these challenges. These projects include a new approach to monitoring the behavior of large-scale networked systems, the design of new network protocol adaptation mechanisms for large-scale networked systems, and a learning-based approaches to network adaptation policies that I am beginning to explore in cooperation with Professors Forrest and Lane.