Backward Error Recovery
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Definition Of Backward Error Recovery
G H I J K L M N O backward error recovery information P Q R S T U V W X Y Z # Home Dictionaries, meaning of backward error recovery Thesauruses, Pictures, and Press Releases A Dictionary of Computing January 2004 backward error recovery Print this article Cite this article Tools A Dictionary
Define Backward Error Recovery
of Computing | 2004 | 306 words © A Dictionary of Computing 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. backward error recovery A mechanism that, on discovery of an error, restores a system to an earlier state (a recovery point) by undoing the effects of
Backward Error Recovery Example
operations that have been performed since that earlier state was last current. This is achieved by saving recovery data during the execution of operations. Cite this article Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography. MLA Chicago APA JOHN DAINTITH. "backward error recovery." A Dictionary of Computing. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 1 Oct. 2016
York, NY, USA tableofcontents 1986 Article Bibliometrics ·Downloads (6 Weeks): n/a ·Downloads (12 Months): n/a ·Downloads (cumulative): n/a ·Citation backward and forward recovery in distributed system Count: 0 Recent authors with related interests Concepts in this
Backward Error Correction
article powered by Concepts inBackward error recovery in distributed systems Error detection and correction In information theory forward and backward error recovery in distributed system and coding theory with applications in computer science and telecommunication, error detection and correction or error control are techniques that enable reliable delivery of digital data over unreliable communication http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O11-backwarderrorrecovery.html channels. Many communication channels are subject to channel noise, and thus errors may be introduced during transmission from the source to a receiver. morefromWikipedia Distributed computing Distributed computing is a field of computer science that studies distributed systems. A distributed system consists of multiple autonomous computers that communicate through a computer network. The computers interact with each http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=12024 other in order to achieve a common goal. A computer program that runs in a distributed system is called a distributed program, and distributed programming is the process of writing such programs. morefromWikipedia Tools and Resources Save to Binder Export Formats: BibTeX EndNote ACMRef Share: | Author Tags database design and models design distributed architectures distributed systems organizing principles error handling and recovery reliability Contact Us | Switch to single page view (no tabs) **Javascript is not enabled and is required for the "tabbed view" or switch to the single page view** Powered by The ACM Digital Library is published by the Association for Computing Machinery. Copyright © 2016 ACM, Inc. Terms of Usage Privacy Policy Code of Ethics Contact Us Useful downloads: Adobe Reader QuickTime Windows Media Player Real Player Did you know the ACM DL App is now available? Did you know your Organization can subscribe to the ACM Digital Library? The ACM Guide to Computing Literature All Tags Export Formats Save to Binder
Request full-text Backward error recovery protocols in distributed mobile systems: A surveyArticle in Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications 16(2) · January 2009 with 33 Reads1st Sunil KumarGupta2nd R. K Chauhan3rd Parveen KumarAbstractThis survey https://www.researchgate.net/publication/237750691_Backward_error_recovery_protocols_in_distributed_mobile_systems_A_survey covers backward error recovery techniques for distributed systems specially the distributed mobile systems. Backward error recovery protocols have been classified into user triggered checkpointing and transparent checkpointing. Transparent checkpointing can be uncoordinated checkpointing, Coordinated checkpointing, Quasi Synchronous or communication-induced checkpointing and Message Logging based Checkpointing. Through out this survey we, highlight the research issues that are at the core of backward backward error error recovery and present the solutions that currently address them.Do you want to read the rest of this article?Request full-text CitationsCitations7ReferencesReferences63Leveraging the Potential of Control-Flow Error Resilient Techniques in Multithreaded Programs"There are three steps involved in backward error recovery [20], [26]: 1) Periodical check pointing the error-free state, 2) Restoration when a fault occurred, 3) Restart from the restored state . "[Show backward error recovery abstract] [Hide abstract] ABSTRACT: This paper presents a software-based technique to recover control-flow errors in multithreaded programs. Control-flow error recovery is achieved through inserting additional instructions into multithreaded program at compile time regarding to two dependency graphs. These graphs are extracted to model control-flow and data dependencies among basic blocks and thread interactions between different threads of a program. In order to evaluate the proposed technique, three multithreaded benchmarks quick sort, matrix multiplication and linked list utilized to run on a multi-core processor, and a total of 5000 transient faults has been injected into several executable points of each program. The results show that this technique detects and corrects between 91.9% and 93.8% of the injected faults with acceptable performance and memory overheads.Article · Jul 2016 Navid KhoshaviMohammad MaghsoudlooHamid R. ZarandiReadThe Consistence of Checkpointing and Rollback Recovery Scheme"As shown in Figure 2 , each process P i , P j , P k started by the nondeterministic event, and the subsequent experienced events among the process P i , P j , P k follow the irreflexive partial order. The irreflexive partial o