| USITS 2001 Abstract 
CANS: Composable, Adaptive Network Services Infrastructure
Xiaodong Fu, Weisong Shi, Anatoly Akkerman, and Vijay Karamcheti, New York UniversityAbstractUbiquitous access to sophisticated internet services from diverse
  end devices across heterogeneous networks requires the injection of
  additional functionality into the network to handle protocol
  conversion, data transcoding, and in general bridge disparate
  network portions. Several researchers have proposed infrastructures
  for injecting such functionality; however, many challenges remain
  before these can be widely deployed.
  
  CANS is an application-level infrastructure for injecting
  application-specific components into the network that focuses on
  three such challenges: (a) efficient and dynamic composition of
  individual components; (b) distributed adaptation of injected
  components in response to system conditions; and (c) support for
  legacy applications and services.  The CANS network view comprises
  applications, stateful services, and data paths
  built from mobile soft-state objects called drivers.  Both
  services and data paths can be dynamically created and reconfigured:
  a planning and event propagation model assists in distributed
  adaptation, and a flexible type-based composition model dictates how
  new services and drivers are integrated with existing components.
  Legacy components plug into CANS using an interception layer that
  virtualizes network bindings and a delegation model.
  
  This paper describes the CANS architecture, and a case study
  involving a shrink-wrapped client application in a dynamically
  changing network environment where CANS improves overall user
  experience.
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