This course has been renamed to
18-749: Fault-Tolerant Distributed Systems in
Spring 2005
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Since the only real way to appreciate dependability issues is to experience them first-hand, a substantial portion of the course content will involve a cooperative team software system implementation project. The project requires the design, implementation, empirical evaluation and end-to-end analysis of a real-time fault-tolerant high-performance distributed middleware application. The lectures, along with regular project meetings with the instructor, will allow students to design and implement realistic middleware applications, to develop working infrastructures to make these applications dependable, and to analyze the effectiveness of their techniques.
12 units (3 hours lecture + 1 hour project meeting per week)
PREREQUISITES
(1) Solid knowledge of C++ and/or Java (if you have a knowledge of Java,
you will need to pick a Java-based project in this course; if you have
a knowledge of C++, you will need to pick a C++-based project in this course).
(2) Understanding of basic operating systems concepts
MEETING TIMES
TUESDAY AND THURSDAY,
5.00-6.20 PM NSH 1305
PLUS: recitation/project meeting times TBD
PREVIOUS OFFERINGS OF THIS COURSE
18-841/17-654 in Spring 2002
INSTRUCTOR
Prof. Priya Narasimhan
contributed significantly to the
establishment of the Fault-Tolerant CORBA standard
and released a reliable CORBA product as the CTO and Vice-President of
Engineering at Eternal Systems. She is now an Assistant Professor
of ECE and ISRI.
She conducts research in the area of
dependable middleware systems, specifically, the
MEAD real-time
fault-tolerant system and the
Starfish proactively survivable system.
Office: Hamerschlag Hall A-303
Tel: 412-268-8801
Email: priya@cs.cmu.edu