Mobile agent
In computer science, a mobile agent is a composition of computer software and data which is able to migrate (move) from one computer to another autonomously and continue its execution on the destination computer. In reality, the mobile agent is the code/object on move which travels in its itinerary within the network of connected nodes.[1]
Definition and overview
A Mobile Agent, namely, is a type of software agent, with the feature of autonomy, social ability, learning, and most significantly, mobility.
More specifically, a mobile agent is a process that can transport its state from one environment to another, with its data intact, and be capable of performing appropriately in the new environment. Mobile agents decide when and where to move. Movement is often evolved from RPC methods. Just as a user directs an Internet browser to "visit" a website (the browser merely downloads a copy of the site or one version of it in the case of dynamic web sites), similarly, a mobile agent accomplishes a move through data duplication. When a mobile agent decides to move, it saves its own state (process image), transports this saved state to the new host, and resumes execution from the saved state.
A mobile agent is a specific form of mobile code, within the field of code mobility. However, in contrast to the Remote evaluation and Code on demand programming paradigms, mobile agents are active in that they can choose to migrate between computers at any time during their execution. This makes them a powerful tool for implementing distributed applications in a computer network.
There are two types of mobile agent. The classification is based on their migration path.
(1) Mobile agents with predefined path : Have static migration path
(2) Free roaming mobile agent:[2] Have dynamic migration path. Depending up on the present network condition the mobile agent chooses its path.
An open multi-agent systems (MAS) is a system in which agents, that are owned by a variety of stakeholders, continuously enter and leave the system.
Advantages
Some advantages which mobile agents have over conventional agents are:
- Computation bundles - converts computational client/server round trips to relocatable data bundles, reducing network load.
- Parallel processing -asynchronous execution on multiple heterogeneous network hosts
- Dynamic adaptation - actions are dependent on the state of the host environment
- Tolerant to network faults - able to operate without an active connection between client and server
- Flexible maintenance - to change an agent's actions, only the source (rather than the computation hosts) must be updated
- Bandwidth conversion which is conversion the bandwidth one host to another host.
- Reduction compilation time
One particular advantage for remote deployment of software includes increased portability thereby making system requirements less influential.
See also
- Code mobility
- Java Aglets
- JADE
- Fraglets
References
- ↑ singh chowhan, Rahul; purohit, Dr. Rajesh (2016-12-15). "Study of Mobile Agent Server Architectures for Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Distributed Systems". IJCA. 156: 32–37. doi:10.5120/ijca2016912420. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
- ↑ Linna, Fan; Jun, Liu (2010-06-01). "A free-roaming mobile agent security protocol against colluded truncation attack". 2010 2nd International Conference on Education Technology and Computer (ICETC). 5: V5–261–V5–265. doi:10.1109/ICETC.2010.5530034.
External links
- Seven Good Reasons for Mobile Agents
- Mobile Agent Technologies, developer of AgentOS agent based operating system. Inventor of Automatic Thread Migration (ATM).
- National Institute for Standards and Technology, hosts a center for investigating security of mobile agents.
- AgentLink III
- Mobile-C, a multi-agent platform for mobile C/C++ agents.
- JADE, an OSS mobile agent framework written in JAVA.
- The Foundation for Intelligent Physical Agents, a standards body which defines an interface for agent based interactions.
- Secure Mobile Agents Project, a project to develop a secure mobile agent server (last release 2007).
- AgentLink III