Separating Agent-Functioning and Inter-Agent Coordination by Activated Modules: The DECOMAS Architecture

Jan Sudeikat
(HAW)
Wolfgang Renz
(HAW)

The embedding of self-organizing inter-agent processes in distributed software applications enables the decentralized coordination system elements, solely based on concerted, localized interactions. The separation and encapsulation of the activities that are conceptually related to the coordination, is a crucial concern for systematic development practices in order to prepare the reuse and systematic integration of coordination processes in software systems. Here, we discuss a programming model that is based on the externalization of processes prescriptions and their embedding in Multi-Agent Systems (MAS). One fundamental design concern for a corresponding execution middleware is the minimal-invasive augmentation of the activities that affect coordination. This design challenge is approached by the activation of agent modules. Modules are converted to software elements that reason about and modify their host agent. We discuss and formalize this extension within the context of a generic coordination architecture and exemplify the proposed programming model with the decentralized management of (web) service infrastructures.

In Tom Van Cutsem and Mark Miller: Proceedings First International Workshop on Decentralized Coordination of Distributed Processes (DCDP 2010), Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 10th June 2010, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 27, pp. 17–31.
Published: 9th June 2010.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.27.3 bibtex PDF

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