Towards a scalable, open-standards service for brokering cross-protocol data transfers across multiple sources and sinks

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Abstract

Data Transfer Service (DTS) is an open-source project that is developing a documentcentric message model for describing a bulk data transfer activity, with an accompanying set of loosely coupled and platform-independent components for brokering the transfer of data between a wide range of (potentially incompatible) storage resources as scheduled, fault-tolerant batch jobs. The architecture scales from small embedded deployments on a single computer to large distributed deployments through an expandable 'workernode pool' controlled through message-orientated middleware. Data access and transfer efficiency are maximized through the strategic placement of worker nodes at or between particular data sources/sinks. The design is inherently asynchronous, and, when third-party transfer is not available, it side-steps the bandwidth, concurrency and scalability limitations associated with buffering bytes directly through intermediary client applications. It aims to address geographical-topological deployment concerns by allowing service hosting to be either centralized (as part of a shared service) or confined to a single institution or domain. Established design patterns and open-source components are coupled with a proposal for a document-centric and open-standards-based messaging protocol. As part of the development of the message protocol, a bulk data copy activity document is proposed for the first time. © 2010 The Royal Society.

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APA

Meredith, D., Crouch, S., Galang, G., Jiang, M., Nguyen, H., & Turner, P. (2010). Towards a scalable, open-standards service for brokering cross-protocol data transfers across multiple sources and sinks. In Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences (Vol. 368, pp. 4115–4131). Royal Society. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2010.0148

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