Chapter 2-Communication
Chapter 2-Communication
Chapter 2 - Communication
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Introduction
▪ Interprocess communication is at the heart of all distributed
systems
▪ communication in distributed systems is based on message
passing as offered by the underlying network as opposed to
using shared memory
▪ Modern distributed systems consist of thousands of
processes scattered across an unreliable network such as
the Internet
▪ Unless the primitive communication facilities of the network
are replaced by more advanced ones, development of large
scale Distributed Systems becomes extremely difficult.
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2.1 Layered Protocols
▪ Two computers, possibly from different manufacturers, must
be able to talk to each other
▪ for such a communication, there has to be a standard
▪ The ISO OSI (Open Systems Interconnection) Reference
Model is one of such standards - 7 layers
▪ TCP/IP protocol suite is the other; has 4 or 5 layers
▪ OSI
▪ Open – to connect open systems or systems that are open
for communication with other open systems using standard
rules that govern the format, contents, and meaning of the
messages sent and received
▪ these rules are called protocols
▪ Two types of protocols: connection-oriented and
connectionless
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layers, interfaces, and protocols in the OSI model
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Media (lower) Layers
▪ Physical: Physical characteristics of the media
▪ Data Link: Reliable data delivery across the link
▪ Network: Managing connections across the network
or routing
▪ Transport: End-to-end connection and reliability (handles
lost packets); TCP (connection-oriented),
UDP (connectionless), etc.
▪ Session: Managing sessions between applications
(dialog control and synchronization); rarely
supported
▪ Presentation: Data presentation to applications; concerned
with the syntax and semantics of the
information transmitted
▪ Application: Network services to applications; contains
protocols that are commonly needed by
users; FTP, HTTP, SMTP, ...
Host (upper) Layers
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a typical message as it appears on the network
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▪ A conversation occurs between a sender and a receiver at
each layer
▪ e.g., at the data link layer
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2.2.1 Basic RPC Operation
▪ Conventional Procedure Call, i.e., on a single machine
▪ e.g. count = read (fd, buf, bytes); a C like statement, where
fd is an integer indicating a file
buf is an array of characters into which data are read
bytes is the number of bytes to be read
Stack pointer
Stack pointer
▪ The client program implements the client program and links it with the
client-side stubs.
▪ The stubs are responsible for managing all details of the remote
communication between client and server.
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▪ Steps of a Remote Procedure Call
1. Client procedure calls client stub in the normal way
2. Client stub builds a message and calls the local OS
(packing parameters into a message is called parameter
marshaling)
3. Client's OS sends the message to the remote OS
4. Remote OS gives the message to the server stub
5. Server stub unpacks the parameters and calls the server
6. Server does the work and returns the result to the stub
7. Server stub packs it in a message and calls the local OS
8. Server's OS sends the message to the client's OS
9. Client's OS gives the message to the client stub
10. Stub unpacks the result and returns to client
▪ hence, for the client remote services are accessed by making
ordinary (local) procedure calls; not by calling send and
receive
server machine vs server process; client machine vs client process
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2.2.2 Parameter Passing
o The function of the client stub is to take its parameters, pack them into a mes-
sage, and send them to the server stub. While this sounds straightforward, it is
not quite as simple as it at first appears.
1. Passing Value Parameters
▪ e.g., consider a remote procedure add(i, j), where i and j are
integer parameters
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original message on the Pentium
(the numbers in boxes indicate the address of each byte)
the message after receipt on the SPARC; wrong integer (5*224) 83886080, but
correct string
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▪ one approach is to invert the bytes of each word after
receipt
the message after being inverted (correct integer but wrong string)
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2. Passing Reference Parameters
▪ assume the parameter is a pointer to an array
▪ copy the array into the message and send it to the server
▪ the server stub can then call the server with a pointer to this
array
▪ the server then makes any changes to the array and sends it
back to the client stub which copies it to the client
▪ this is in effect call-by-copy/restore
▪ optimization of the method
▪ one of the copy operations can be eliminated if the stub
knows whether the parameter is input or output to the
server
▪ if it is an input to the server (e.g., in a call to write), it need
not be copied back
▪ if it is an output, it need not be sent over in the first place.
▪ the above procedure can handle pointers to simple arrays
and structures, but difficult to generalize it to an arbitrary
data structure.
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▪ Parameter Specification and Stub Generation
▪ the caller and the callee need to use the same protocol
(format of messages) and the same steps; with such rules the
client and server stubs can assemble, communicate, and
interpret messages correctly
▪ consider the following example; the procedure foobar has 3
parameters: a character, a floating point number, and an array
of 5 integers
a. Doors
▪ the original RPC model assumes that the caller and the
callee can communicate only by means of passing
messages over a network; what if they are collocated on
the same machine?
▪ a door is a generic name for a procedure in the address
space of a server process that can be called by a process
collocated with the server
▪ support from the local OS is required
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1. the server process registers a door before it can be called
(door_create) and a name is attached to it
1. a client calls a door by a system call (door_call) including
all parameters
2. results are returned by the system call door_return
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the principle of using doors as IPC mechanism
▪ benefit: it allows the use of a single mechanism (procedure
calls) for communication
▪ disadv: application developers have to be aware of where a
procedure is located; is it
▪ local within the current process
▪ local to a different process on the same machine
▪ a remote process
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b. Asynchronous RPC
▪ if there is no need to block the client until it gets a reply
▪ two cases
1. if there is no result to be returned
▪ e.g., adding entries in a database, ...
▪ the server immediately sends an ack promising that it
will carryout the request
▪ the client can now proceed without blocking
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2.2.4 DCE (Distributed Computing Environment) RPC
▪ a middleware and an example RPC system developed by
OSF (Open Software Foundation), now The Open Group
▪ it is designed to execute as a layer of abstraction between
existing OSs and distributed applications
▪ the Open Group sells the source code and vendors integrate
it into their systems
▪ it uses the client-server programming model and
communication is by means of RPCs
▪ services
▪ distributed file service: a worldwide file system that
provides a transparent way of accessing files
▪ directory service: to keep track of the location of all
resources in the system (machines, printers, data,
servers, ...); a process can ask for a resource without
knowing its location
▪ security service: for protecting resources; access is only
through authorization 29
▪ distributed time service: to maintain clocks on different
machines synchronized (clock synchronization is covered
in Chapter 5)
▪ Steps in writing a Client and a Server in DCE RPC
▪ the system consists of languages, libraries, daemons,
utility programs, ... for writing clients and servers
▪ IDL (Interface Definition Language) is the interface
language - the glue that holds everything together
▪ it contains type definitions, constant declarations
and what the procedures do (only their syntax)
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▪ Uuidgen generates a prototype IDL file with a globally unique interface
identifier
▪ the IDL file is edited (filling the names of procedures and parameters) and
the IDL compiler is called to generate 3 files
▪ the application writer writes the client and server codes and are then
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compiled and linked together with the stubs
▪ Binding a Client to a Server in DCE RPC
▪ for a client to call a server, the server must be registered (1 &
2)
▪ the registration allows the client to locate the server and
bind to it
▪ the DCE daemon maintains a table (server, endpoint) and the
protocols the server uses
▪ the directory server maintains the locations of all resources
in the system (machines, servers, data,, ...)
▪ two steps for server location
▪ locate the server’s machine (3)
▪ locate the server process on that machine (which has
what is called an endpoint or port) (4)
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2.3 Remote Object (Method) Invocation (RMI)
▪ resulted from object-based technology that has proven its
value in developing nondistributed applications
▪ it is an expansion of the RPC mechanisms
▪ it enhances distribution transparency as a consequence of
an object that hides its internal from the outside world by
means of a well-defined interface
▪ Distributed Objects
▪ an object encapsulates data, called the state, and the
operations on those data, called methods
▪ methods are made available through interfaces
▪ the state of an object can be manipulated only by invoking
methods
▪ this allows an interface to be placed on one machine while
the object itself resides on another machine; such an
organization is referred to as a distributed object
▪ the state of an object is not distributed, only the interfaces
are; such objects are also referred to as remote objects 34
▪ the implementation of an object’s interface is called a proxy
(analogous to a client stub in RPC systems)
▪ it is loaded into the client’s address space when a client
binds to a distributed object
▪ tasks: a proxy marshals method invocation into messages
and unmarshals reply messages to return the result of the
method invocation to the client
▪ a server stub, called a skeleton, unmarshals messages and
marshals replies
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common organization of a remote object with client-side proxy
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▪ Binding a Client to an Object
▪ a process must first bind to an object before invoking its
methods, which results in a proxy being placed in the
process’s address space
▪ binding can be implicit (directly invoke methods using
only a reference to an object) or explicit (by calling a
special function)
▪ an object reference could contain
▪ network address of the machine where the object
resides
▪ endpoint of the server
▪ an identification of which object
▪ the protocol used
▪ ...
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RMI Architecture
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The General RMI Architecture
Remote Machine
to establish remote
references. return call lookup
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The Stub and Skeleton
call
skeleton
Stub
RMI Client RMI Server
return
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▪ Parameter Passing
▪ there are two situations when invoking a method with
object reference as parameter; is the object local or
remote to the client?
▪ remote object: copy and pass the reference of the object
as a value parameter; this means the object is passed by
reference
▪ local object: a copy of the object is passed; this means the
object is passed by value
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Figure: the situation when passing an object by reference or by
value
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2.4 Message Oriented Communication
▪ RPCs and RMIs are not adequate for all distributed system
applications
▪ The provision of access transparency may be good but
they have semantics that is not adequate for all
applications
▪ Example problems
▪ They assume that the receiving side is running at the
time of communication
▪ a client is blocked until its request has been processed
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▪ 2.4.1 Persistence and Synchronicity in Communication
▪ assume the communication system is organized as a
computer network shown below
Persistent Transient
Asynchronous ✓ ✓
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persistent asynchronous communication persistent synchronous communication
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transient asynchronous communication receipt-based transient synchronous
communication
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delivery-based transient synchronous response-based transient synchronous
communication at message delivery communication
▪ the sender is blocked until the ▪ strongest form; the sender is
message is delivered to the blocked until it receives a reply
receiver for further processing; message from the receiver
e.g., asynchronous RPC
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2.4.2 Message-Oriented Transient Communication
▪ many applications are built on top of the simple message-
oriented model offered by the transport layer
▪ standardizing the interface of the transport layer by
providing a set of primitives allows programmers to use
messaging protocols
▪ they also allow porting applications
1. Berkley Sockets
▪ an example is the socket interface as used in Berkley
UNIX
▪ a socket is a communication endpoint to which an
application can write data that are to be sent over the
network, and from which incoming data can be read.
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Primitive Meaning Executed by
Socket Create a new communication endpoint; also both
reserve resources to send and receive messages
Bind Attach a local address to a socket; e.g., IP
address with a known port number
Listen Announce willingness to accept connections; for
connection-oriented communication
Accept Block caller until a connection request arrives
servers
Connect Actively attempt to establish a connection; the
client is blocked until connection is set up
Send Send some data over the connection
Receive Receive some data over the connection
Close Release the connection
Socket primitives for TCP/IP
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connection-oriented communication pattern using sockets
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2. The Message-Passing Interface (MPI)
▪ sockets were designed to communicate across networks
using general-purpose protocol stacks such as TCP/IP
▪ they were not designed for proprietary protocols
developed for high-speed interconnection networks; of
course portability will suffer
▪ MPI is designed for parallel applications and tailored for
transient communication
▪ MPI assumes communication takes place within a known
group of processes, where each group is assigned an
identifier (groupID)
▪ each process within a group is also assigned an identifier
(processID)
▪ a (groupID, processID) identifies the source or destination
of a message, and is used instead of a transport-level
address
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Primitive Meaning
MPI_ssend Send a message and wait until receipt starts (to support
delivery-based transient synchronous communication)
MPI_sendrecv Send a message and wait for reply (to support response-
based transient synchronous communication)
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2.4.3 Message-Oriented Persistent Communication
▪ there are message-oriented middleware services, called
message-queuing systems or Message-Oriented Middleware
(MOM)
▪ they support persistent asynchronous communication
▪ they have intermediate-term storage capacity for messages,
without requiring the sender or the receiver to be active
during message transmission
▪ unlike Berkley sockets and MPI, message transfer may take
minutes instead of seconds or milliseconds
Message-Queuing Model
▪ applications communicate by inserting messages in
specific queues
▪ it permits loosely-coupled communication
▪ the sender may or may not be running; similarly the
receiver may or may not be running, giving four possible
combinations
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four combinations for loosely-coupled communications using queues
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Primitive Meaning
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▪ General Architecture of a Message-Queuing System
▪ messages can be put only into queues that are local to the
sender (same machine or on a nearby machine on a LAN)
▪ such a queue is called the source queue
▪ messages can also be read only from local queues
▪ a message put into a local queue must contain the specification
of the destination queue; hence a message-queuing system
must maintain a mapping of queues to network locations; like
in DNS
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the general organization of a message-queuing system with routers
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▪ Message Brokers
▪ how can applications understand the messages they receive
▪ each receiver can not be made to understand message formats
of new applications
▪ hence, in a message-queuing system conversations are
handled by message brokers
▪ a message broker converts incoming messages to a format that
can be understood by the destination application based on a
set of rules
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▪ timing in transmission modes
▪ asynchronous transmission mode: data items are
transmitted one after the other, but no timing constraints;
e.g. text transfer
▪ synchronous transmission mode: a maximum end-to-end
delay defined for each data unit; it is possible that data can
be transmitted faster than the maximum delay, but not slower
▪ isochronous transmission mode: maximum and minimum
end-to-end delay are defined; also called bounded delay
jitter; applicable for distributed multimedia systems
▪ a continuous data stream can be simple or complex
▪ simple stream: consists of a single sequence of data; e.g.,
mono audio, video only
▪ complex stream: consists of several related simple streams
that must be synchronized; e.g., stereo audio, video
consisting of audio and video (may also contain subtitles,
translation to other languages, ...)
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movie as a set of simple streams
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▪ a stream can be considered as a virtual connection between a
source and a sink
▪ the source or the sink could be a process or a device
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▪ Quality of Service (QoS)
▪ QoS requirements describe what is needed from the
underlying distributed system and network to ensure
acceptable delivery; e.g. viewing experience of a user
▪ for continuous data, the concerns are
▪ timeliness: data must be delivered in time
▪ volume: the required throughput must be met
▪ reliability: a given level of loss of data must not be
exceeded
▪ quality of perception; highly subjective
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▪ QoS Dimensions
▪ timeliness dimensions
▪ latency (maximum delay between consecutive frames)
▪ start-up latency (maximum delay before starting a
presentation)
▪ jitter (delay variance)
▪ volume dimensions
▪ throughput in frames/sec or bits/sec or bytes/sec
▪ reliability dimensions
▪ MTBF (Mean Time Between Failure) of disks
▪ MTTR (Mean Time To Repair)
▪ error rates on the telecommunication lines
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▪ QoS Requirements
▪ deterministic
▪ precise values or ranges
▪ e.g., latency must be between 45 and 55 ms
▪ probabilistic
▪ probability of the required QoS
▪ e.g., latency should be < 50 ms for 95% of the frames
▪ stochastic distributions
▪ e.g., frame arrival should follow normal distribution with
mean interval-time of 40 ms and 5 ms variance
▪ classes
▪ e.g., guaranteed and best effort
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▪ QoS Management
▪ can be static or dynamic
▪ Static QoS Management Functions
▪ specification
▪ e.g., deterministic range for timeliness, volume and
reliability categories
▪ negotiation
▪ the application may accept lower level of QoS for
lower cost
▪ admission control
▪ if this test is passed, the system has to guarantee the
promised QoS
▪ resource reservation
▪ may be necessary to provide guaranteed QoS
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▪ Dynamic QoS Management Functions
▪ monitoring
▪ notices deviation from QoS level
▪ at a certain level of granularity (e.g., every 100 ms)
▪ policing
▪ detect participants not keeping themselves to the contract
▪ e.g., source sends faster than negotiated (e.g., 25 fps)
▪ maintenance
▪ sustaining the negotiated QoS
▪ e.g., the system requires more resources
▪ renegotiation
▪ client tries to adapt – may be can accept lower QoS
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▪ QoS requirements can be specified using flow specification
containing bandwidth requirements, transmission rates,
delays, ...
▪ e.g. by Partridge (1992)
▪ it uses the token bucket algorithm which specifies how the
stream will shape its network traffic (in fact the leaky
bucket, as used in networking)
▪ the idea is to shape bursty traffic into fixed-rate traffic by
averaging the data rate
▪ packets may be dropped if the bucket is full
▪ the input rate may vary, but the output rate remains
constant
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the principle of a token bucket algorithm
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▪ problem in flow specification
▪ an application may not know its requirements
▪ how can a user (human) specify quality using the various
parameters? usually very difficult
▪ may be provide defaults for various streams as high,
medium, low quality
▪ Setting up a Stream
▪ resources such as bandwidth, buffers, processing power
must be reserved once a flow specification is made
▪ on such protocol is RSVP - Resource reSerVation Protocol
▪ it is a transport-level protocol for enabling resource
reservation in network routers
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the basic organization of RSVP for resource reservation in a distributed system
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▪ Stream Synchronization
▪ how to maintain temporal relations between streams, e.g., lip
synchronization
▪ two approaches
1. explicitly by operating on the data units of simple
streams; the responsibility of the application
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