Distributed and parallel database systems
1996
Abstract
The maturation of database management system (DBMS) technology has coincided with significant developments in distributed computing and parallel processing technologies. The end result is the emergence of distributed database management systems and parallel database management systems. These systems have started to become the dominant data-management tools for highly data-intensive applications.
References (8)
- DOGAC, A., ÖZSU, M. T., BILIRIS, A., AND SELLIS, T. Eds. 1994. Advances in Object-Oriented Database Systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
- ELMAGARMID, A. K., ED. 1992. Transaction Models for Advanced Database Applications. Morgan-Kaufmann, San Mateo, CA.
- GRAY, J. N. 1979. Notes on data base operating systems. In Operating Systems: An Advanced Course. R. Bayer, R. M. Graham, and G. Seeg- mu ¨ller, Eds., Springer-Verlag, New York, 393-481.
- ORFALI, R., HARKEY, D., AND EDWARDS, J. 1994. Essential Client/Server Survival Guide. Wiley, New York.
- ÖZSU, M. T. AND VALDURIEZ, P. 1991. Principles of Distributed Database Systems. Prentice- Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
- ÖZSU, M. T., DAYAL, U., AND VALDURIEZ, P., EDS. 1994. Distributed Object Manage- ment. Morgan-Kaufmann, San Mateo, CA.
- SHETH, A. AND LARSON, J. 1990. Federated da- tabases: Architectures and integration. ACM Comput. Surv. 22, 3 (Sept.), 183-236.
- VALDURIEZ, P. 1993. Parallel database systems: Open problems and new issues. Distrib. Par- allel Databases 1, 2 (April), 137-165.