Java technology: A comparison of a File Transfer Protocol application in Sockets Datagrams, RMI
S. Ahuja, J. Mishra, A. Ritzhaupt, A. Gonzalez, and B. Vega. Proceedings of the College of Computing, Engineering, and Construction Symposium and Career Showcase, page 61-64. Jacksonville, FL, University of North Florida, University of North Florida, (April 2004)
Abstract
Client-server computing architecture revolutionized the software field and continues to be widely used today. The advent of the Java programming language made it simpler to code clients and servers by encapsulating much of the programming complexity in the language. This paper evaluates three such Java client-server computing APIs quantitatively and qualitatively – Java Socket API, Java Datagram API and Java RMI API. Thus, this study encompasses TCP sockets, UDP datagrams and the standard RMI facility of Java.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 ahuja2004technology
%A Ahuja, S.
%A Mishra, J.
%A Ritzhaupt, A. D.
%A Gonzalez, A.
%A Vega, B.
%B Proceedings of the College of Computing, Engineering, and Construction Symposium and Career Showcase
%C Jacksonville, FL
%D 2004
%I University of North Florida
%K 2004 myown proceeding
%P 61-64
%T Java technology: A comparison of a File Transfer Protocol application in Sockets Datagrams, RMI
%U http://www.aritzhaupt.com/eprofessional/papers/2004/AhujaMishraGonzalezRitzhauptVega.pdf
%X Client-server computing architecture revolutionized the software field and continues to be widely used today. The advent of the Java programming language made it simpler to code clients and servers by encapsulating much of the programming complexity in the language. This paper evaluates three such Java client-server computing APIs quantitatively and qualitatively – Java Socket API, Java Datagram API and Java RMI API. Thus, this study encompasses TCP sockets, UDP datagrams and the standard RMI facility of Java.
@inproceedings{ahuja2004technology,
abstract = {Client-server computing architecture revolutionized the software field and continues to be widely used today. The advent of the Java programming language made it simpler to code clients and servers by encapsulating much of the programming complexity in the language. This paper evaluates three such Java client-server computing APIs quantitatively and qualitatively – Java Socket API, Java Datagram API and Java RMI API. Thus, this study encompasses TCP sockets, UDP datagrams and the standard RMI facility of Java. },
added-at = {2017-03-14T21:22:07.000+0100},
address = {Jacksonville, FL},
author = {Ahuja, S. and Mishra, J. and Ritzhaupt, A. D. and Gonzalez, A. and Vega, B.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e653c62d3f1b8cfcb9316b20a8cf39e8/aritzhaupt},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the College of Computing, Engineering, and Construction Symposium and Career Showcase},
interhash = {ce6b81d3cb9f49609c461b0615a08592},
intrahash = {e653c62d3f1b8cfcb9316b20a8cf39e8},
keywords = {2004 myown proceeding},
month = {April},
organization = {University of North Florida},
pages = {61-64},
publisher = {University of North Florida},
timestamp = {2017-03-14T21:22:07.000+0100},
title = {Java technology: A comparison of a File Transfer Protocol application in Sockets Datagrams, RMI},
url = {http://www.aritzhaupt.com/eprofessional/papers/2004/AhujaMishraGonzalezRitzhauptVega.pdf},
year = 2004
}