Document Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
12-1994
Publication Title
Proceedings of the CIKM Workshop on Intelligent Information Agents, Third International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
Department
Department of Computer Science
Abstract
As network information resources grow in size, it is often most efficient to process queries and updates at the site where the data is located. This processing can be accomplished by using a traditional client-server network interface, which constrains the client to the set of queries supported by the server, or requires the server to send all data to the client for processing. The former is inflexible; the latter is inefficient. Transportable agents, which support the movement of the client computation to the location of the remote resource, have the potential to be more flexible and more efficient. Transportable agents are capable of suspending their execution, transporting themselves to another host on a network, and resuming execution from the point at which they were suspended. Transportable agents consume fewer network resources and can support systems that do not have permanent network connections, such as mobile computers and personal digital assistants. We describe a prototype transportable-agent implementation that facilitates research in this area. Agents are written in a script language that supports agent relocation, and the language is processed at each host by an agent interpreter. Electronic mail is the current transport mechanism and we plan to explore others. We present a technical-report searching agent as a demonstration of the capabilities of our prototype implementation.
Original Citation
Keith D. Kotay and David Kotz. Transportable Agents. In Proceedings of the CIKM Workshop on Intelligent Information Agents, Third International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, December 1994.
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Kotay, Keith D. and Kotz, David, "Transportable Agents" (1994). Dartmouth Scholarship. 3098.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/3098