Utility Driven Mobile-Agent Scheduling
Jonathan Bredin, David Kotz, and Daniela Rus.
Utility Driven Mobile-Agent Scheduling.
Technical Report number PCS-TR98-331, Dartmouth Computer Science, May 1998.
©Copyright the authors.
Revised October 3, 1998.
Abstract:
Mobile agents are programs capable of migrating from one host machine to another. We propose that mobile agents purchase resource access rights from host machines thereby establishing a market for computational resources and giving agents a metric to evenly distribute themselves throughout the network. Market participation requires quantitative information about resource consumption to define demand and calculate utility.
We create a formal utility model to derive user-demand functions, allowing agents to efficiently plan expenditure and deal with price fluctuations. By quantifying demand and utility, resource owners can precisely set a value for a good. We simulate our model in a mobile agent scheduling environment and show how mobile agents may use server prices to distribute themselves evenly throughout a network. Citable with [BibTeX]: \cite{bredin:demand-tr} Projects: [dagents] Available from the publisher: [page] Available from the author:
[bib]
[pdf]
[ps.gz]
|
![]() |