The Architecture of PIER: an Internet-Scale Query Processor
Article 2005 en
Authors
RH
Ryan Huebsch
BC
Brent Chun
JH
Joseph M. Hellerstein
Abstract
1 min read
This paper presents the architecture of PIER , an Internetscale query engine we have been building over the last three years. PIER is the first general-purpose relational query processor targeted at a peer-to-peer (p2p) architecture of thousands or millions of participating nodes on the Internet. It supports massively distributed, database-style dataflows for snapshot and continuous queries. It is intended to serve as a building block for a diverse set of Internet-scale informationcentric applications, particularly those that tap into the standardized data readily available on networked machines, including packet headers, system logs, and file names
Tom Anderson, Ken Birman, Robert Broberg, Matthew Caesar, Douglas E. Comer, Chase Cotton, Michael J. Freedman, Andreas Haeberlen, Zachary G. Ives, Arvind Krishnamurthy, William Lehr, Boon Thau Loo, David Mazières, Antonio Nicolosi, Jonathan M. Smith, Ion Stoica, Robbert van Renesse, Michael Walfish, Hakim Weatherspoon, Christopher S. Yoo
Tom Anderson, Ken Birman, Robert Broberg, Matthew Caesar, Douglas E. Comer, Chase Cotton, Michael J. Freedman, Andreas Haeberlen, Zachary G. Ives, Arvind Krishnamurthy, William Lehr, Boon Thau Loo, David Mazières, Antonio Nicolosi, Jonathan Smith, Ion Stoica, Robbert van Renesse, Michael Walfish, Hakim Weatherspoon, Christopher S. Yoo
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