Distributed Systems
Lectures
Time | Room | Lecturer | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Mon 10-12 | D122 | Jussi Kangasharju | 01.11.2010-09.12.2010 |
Thu 10-12 | D122 | Jussi Kangasharju | 01.11.2010-09.12.2010 |
Exercise groups
Time | Room | Instructor | Date | Observe |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mon 14-16 | CK111 | Jussi Kangasharju | 01.11.2010—10.12.2010 |
Time | Room | Instructor | Date | Observe |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thu 16-18 | C222 | Mikko Pervilä | 01.11.2010—10.12.2010 |
Registration for this course starts on Tuesday 12th of October at 9.00. Exercises begin on the first lecture week.
General
The course intends to give insight into the main concepts and design principles related with distribution. Goals, challenges, problems, and various solutions are presented and discussed. The emphasis is on concepts and principles, not on practical implementations.
Completing the course
The course can be taken either through participating in a lecture course or through a final exam.
To pass the lecture course you need to
- participate the weekly excercise sessions (one of the groups work in English if needed) (12 points)
- return the written homework assignments (4 assignments); each will be graded (12 points)
- a traditional exam (42 points)
You need minimum 30 points to pass with a minimum of 16 points in the exam. With 50 points you will get a 5. To take a course you have to register yourself through the ILMO system.
Lecture Course
The lecture course is given every year, and it involves
- Lectures 4 hours / week, for 6 weeks.
- Practice sessions 2h/week for 6 weeks.
- Written homework to be returned.
- Course examination.The exam questions will be in English and you may answer in English, Finnish, Swedish, French, or German.
Final Examination
Final examinations are organized typically four times a year. Notice that a "course examination" and a "final examination" are two different things: in order to participate in a course examination you also must have participated in the corresponding practice sessions.
Literature and material
The textbook of the course is Tanenbaum, A.S., van Steen, M., Distributed Systems, Principles and Paradigms; Prentice-Hall, 2007. The topics of the course are mainly in chapters 1,2, 4, 6-8, and 10. Chapters 3 and 5 review material which is part of the pre-requisites of this course.
In the 2002 edition of Tanenbaum and in the Couloris book you can find mostly the equivalent material. You can use the slides to give you an idea of the breadth of topics covered.
Course slides will be made available as the lectures progress.