Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Conference Object Citation - Scopus: 2Resource Allocation Algorithm for a Relational Join Operator in Grid Systems(Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), 2012) Çokuslu, Deniz; Hameurlain, Abdelkader; Erciyeş, Kayhan; Morvan, FranckGrid systems become very popular during the last decade because of their rapidly increasing computational capabilities. On the other hand, the advances on different domains cause enormous increase in the scale of the manipulated data. This issue augments the importance of distributed query processing and causes researchers to port their underlying environment onto the grid systems. However the dynamicity, heterogeneity and large scale characteristics of grid systems pose new problems for the distributed query processing domain. Resource allocation for query processing in grid systems is one of these problems, which attracts many researchers' attention. In this paper, we propose a new resource allocation algorithm for one relational join operator in a query considering characteristics of the grid systems. We provide theoretical analyses of the proposed algorithm and we consolidate analyses with the simulations. Copyright © 2012 ACM.Article Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 7Resource Allocation for Query Processing in Grid Systems: a Survey(CRL Publishing, 2012) Çokuslu, Deniz; Hameurlain, Abdelkader; Erciyeş, KayhanGrid systems are very useful platforms for distributed databases, especially in some situations in which the scale of data sources and user requests is very high. However, the main characteristics of grid systems such as dynamicity, large size and heterogeneity, bring new problems to the query processing domain such as resource discovery and resource allocation. In this paper, we provide a survey related to resource allocation methods for query processing In data grid systems. We provide a classification for existing studies considering their approaches to the resource allocation problem. We provide a synthesis of the studies and propose evaluations and comparisons for the different classes of studies. ©2012 CRL Publishing Ltd.
