| A distributed mutual exclusion solution derived from real-life examples |
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ACM Southeast Regional Conference
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Proceedings of the 30th annual Southeast regional conference
table of contents
Raleigh, North Carolina
SESSION: Session 2A: Distributed computing
table of contents
Pages: 261 - 268
Year of Publication: 1992
ISBN:0-89791-506-2
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 12, Downloads (12 Months): 37, Citation Count: 0
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ABSTRACT
This paper presents a distributed mutual exclusion solution which is derived from a real-life situation which requires mutual exclusion. The proposed algorithm uses a dynamic information structure and requires between 0 and N message exchanges per critical section invocation, where N is the number of nodes in the network. The algorithm is also proved to be free from deadlock and starvation.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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Agrawal 1991
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Carvalho 1983
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O. S. F. Carvalho, and G. Roucairol: On Mutual Exclusion in Computer Networks, CACM, 26(2), Feb. 1983, 146-147.
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Garcia-Molina 1985
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Lamport 1978
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Maekawa 1985
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Raymond 1989
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Ricart 1981
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Ricart 1983
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G. Ricart, and A. K. Agrawala: Author's Response, CACM, 26(2), Feb. 1983, 147-148.
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Singhal 1989
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Suzuki 1985
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van de Snepscheut 1987
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J. L. A. van de Snepscheut: Fair Mutual Exclusion on a Graph of Processes, Distributed Computing, 2, 1987, 113-115.
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