Proceedings Second International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing (Cat. No.98EX244)
DOI: 10.1109/edoc.1998.723266
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Configurable event triggered services for CORBA-based systems

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…An ECA rule waits for an event (E) to be detected, then checks whether the given condition (C) holds and, if so, executes the accompanying action (A). Such ECA rules are not supported by current WSN brokers, though successful experiments show that they can be integrated with CORBA [19]. WSN's failure to support such ECA rules, however, requires an extra roundtrip from the broker (detecting the event) to the consumer (reacting to the event).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…An ECA rule waits for an event (E) to be detected, then checks whether the given condition (C) holds and, if so, executes the accompanying action (A). Such ECA rules are not supported by current WSN brokers, though successful experiments show that they can be integrated with CORBA [19]. WSN's failure to support such ECA rules, however, requires an extra roundtrip from the broker (detecting the event) to the consumer (reacting to the event).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather than notifying the consumer and awaiting its reaction, the action to be undertaken is now stored at the broker, allowing immediate execution of event-handling code when the given event is detected. Our ECA rule structure closely follows the one proposed in [19] and [4], though this structure will be extended in the next Section. Their basic structure contains:…”
Section: Combining Complex Events and Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The architecture presented resembles a publish/subscribe system, whereas publishing of events is non-blocking. Another middleware approach for distributed events in a heterogeneous environment is presented in [16]. CORBA-based, distributed, and heterogeneous systems are enhanced by Active DBMS-style active functionality.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to active rule processing in centralized database systems, the use of active rules has also been investigated in distributed environments. Active rules are used for the interconnection among distributed data sources, services, and software components, such as the work in [14], [15,16], [17], and [18].…”
Section: Active Rule-based Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HiPAC [7], an active object-oriented database system, has the architecture similar to the ASA pattern, where the architecture components are centralized. Another example is the architectures of the C 2 offein project [15,16], where CORBA is the connector. The architecture has also been used in [27] for integration of web services.…”
Section: Known Usesmentioning
confidence: 99%