
doi: 10.1109/69.877509
The popularity of the Web as a universal access mechanism for network information has created the need for developing Web-based DBMS client/server applications. However, the current commercial applet-based approaches for accessing database systems offer limited flexibility, scalability, and robustness. We propose a new framework for Web-based distributed access to database systems based on Java-based mobile agents. The framework supports lightweight, portable, and autonomous clients as well as operation on slow or expensive networks. The implementation of the framework using the aglet workbench shows that its performance is comparable to, and in some case outperforms, the current approach. In fact, in wireless and dial-up environments and for average size transactions, a client/agent/server adaptation of the framework provides a performance improvement of approximately a factor of ten. For the fixed network, the gains are about 40 percent and 30 percent, respectively. We expect our framework to perform even better when deployed using different implementation platforms as indicated by our preliminary results from an implementation based on Voyager.
Performance, mobile computing, DBMS-aglet, jdbc, Web data access, distributed computing, web data access, Computer networks, Aglet, Mobile computing, Distributed database systems, Java programming language, dbms-aglet, Java database connectivity, Distributed computing, World Wide Web, JDBC, Search engines, Query languages, aglet, Aglet workbench, Mobile agents, Client server computer systems, mobile agents
Performance, mobile computing, DBMS-aglet, jdbc, Web data access, distributed computing, web data access, Computer networks, Aglet, Mobile computing, Distributed database systems, Java programming language, dbms-aglet, Java database connectivity, Distributed computing, World Wide Web, JDBC, Search engines, Query languages, aglet, Aglet workbench, Mobile agents, Client server computer systems, mobile agents
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