
Students are expected to have basic computer usage skills. Previous programming experience is essential. Course assignments will be carried out using the Java programming language in a MS Windows environment. Knowledge of MS Windows will be advantageous.
The purpose of CSSE7014 is to show basic principles and paradigms of developing distributed systems and to illustrate how these principles are applied in the existing industrial standards for distributed systems. The course also discusses design issues of ubiquitous/pervasive systems.
The course explores key distributed systems principles such as: communication, processes, naming, synchronization, consistency, replication, fault tolerance, and shows how these principles are applied in the existing distributed computing platforms. In addition, aspects of ubiquitous/pervasive systems are explored including context-awareness and adaptability.
Available for consultations on Monday 12-1 pm or by appointment. Please make simple enquiries via email.
| GRADUATE ATTRIBUTE | LEARNING OBJECTIVES |
| A. IN-DEPTH KNOWLEDGE OF THE FIELD OF STUDY | |
| A2. A broad understanding of the field of study, including how other disciplines relate to the field of study. | 1, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13 |
| A3. A comprehensive and in-depth knowledge in the field of study. | |
| A5. An international perspective on the field of study. | |
| A7. An appreciation of the link between theory and practice. | |
| B. EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION | |
| B1. The ability to collect, analyse and organise information and ideas and to convey those ideas clearly and fluently, in both written and spoken forms. | 4, 12, 13 |
| B2. The ability to interact effectively with others in order to work towards a common outcome. | |
| B3. The ability to select and use the appropriate level, style and means of communication. | |
| B4. The ability to engage effectively and appropriately with information and communication technologies. | |
| B5. The ability to practise as part of an interdisciplinary team. | |
| C. INDEPENDENCE AND CREATIVITY | |
| C2. The ability to work and learn independently and effectively. | 5, 7, 9 |
| C3. The ability to generate ideas and adapt innovatively to changing environments. | |
| C5. The ability to formulate and investigate problems, create solutions, innovate and improve current practices. | 3, 4, 5, 12 |
| C6. The abilities and skills that provide a foundation for future leadership roles. | |
| D. CRITICAL JUDGEMENT | |
| D2. The ability to apply critical reasoning to issues through independent thought and informed judgement. | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13 |
| D4. The ability to process material and to critically analyse and integrate information from a wide range of sources. | |
| D5. The ability to evaluate opinions, make decisions and to reflect critically on the justifications for decisions using an evidence-based approach. | 1, 2, 6, 10, 11 |
| E. ETHICAL AND SOCIAL UNDERSTANDING | |
| E1. An understanding of social and civic responsibility. | 13 |
| E3. An appreciation of the philosophical and social contexts of a discipline. | |
| E4. A knowledge and respect of ethics and ethical standards in relation to a major area of study. | |
| E5. A knowledge of other cultures and times and an appreciation of cultural diversity. | |
| E7. The ability to work effectively and sensitively across all areas of society. | |
| E8. An understanding of and respect for the roles and expertise of associated disciplines. | |
A. S. Tanenbaum and M. van Steen, Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, Prentice Hall – 2007. 2nd edition. |
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Students may find useful the following textbook: George Coulouris, Jean Dollimore and Tim Kindberg, Distributed Systems: Concepts and Design (3rd Edition), Addison-Wesley, Pearson Education – 2001. |
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Three modes of teaching will be used in this course, lectures, tutorials and pracs. The teaching material used in the lectures will be available on the Web. However, it is also necessary to read the appropriate chapters of the textbook. Some additional reading material not covered in the textbook may be provided throughout the course.
CSSE4004 is a 2# course and, on average, students should expect to spend at least 8 hours per week on this course (beyond the contact hours) in order to achieve a passing grade.
Please note that you are not required to attend any of the teaching sessions, however, you are strongly encouraged to do so because the material for this course is quite complex. The lectures and tutorials have been specifically designed to aid your learning of the course material. Failure to attend a session may result in you being disadvantaged. It is up to you to find out what happened at any class session that you miss.
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Grade of 1 will be awarded for 0-19 marks.
Grade of 2 will be awarded for 20-44 marks.
Grade of 3 will be awarded for 45-49 marks.
Grade of 4 will be awarded for 50-66 marks.
Grade of 5 will be awarded for 67-76 marks.
Grade of 6 will be awarded for 77-86 marks.
Grade of 7 will be awarded for 87-100 marks.
Late submission of assignments will be penalised by the loss of 10% of the assignment value per working day (or part thereof). In the event of exceptional personal or medical circumstances that prevent on-time hand in, you should contact the lecturer concerned and be prepared to supply appropriate documentary evidence. Late submissions should be made to the lecturer or head tutor.
The course has two assignments which address design and implementation of distributed applications. The assignments are to (i) show how some of the principles of distributed systems are applied in existing solutions for distributed systems, (ii) give students experience in designing and implementing distributed applications using the existing environments for distributed computing, (and iii) give students experience in designing and implementing context-aware applications. Both assignments require programming in Java. The assignments are worth 25% and 15%, respectively. Exact assessment criteria will be specified with each assignment.
Please note that both assignments are individual work, however they allow group work for the design stage of the assignments.
The assignment description will include a detailed allocation of marks to each component of the distributed application that the assignment requires to develop.
The course has two assignments which address design and implementation of distributed applications. The assignments are to (i) show how some of the principles of distributed systems are applied in existing solutions for distributed systems, (ii) give students experience in designing and implementing distributed applications using the existing environments for distributed computing, (and iii) give students experience in designing and implementing context-aware applications. Both assignments require programming in Java. The assignments are worth 25% and 15%, respectively. Exact assessment criteria will be specified with each assignment.
Please note that both assignments are individual work, however they allow group work for the design stage of the assignments.
The assignment description will include a detailed allocation of marks to each component of the distributed application that the assignment requires to develop.
A two hour final examination will be held during the final examination period. This exam will be open-book and will contain a number of questions. The final examination will test understanding of all the learning objectives except for the learning objective which addresses design and implementation.
The exam will have several questions- each of the questions will be assigned a number of marks. The total number of marks in the exam is 100.
An overview of the University’s assessment-related policies can be found on myAdvisor (http://www.uq.edu.au/myadvisor/index.html?page=2910).
Academic Integrity
It is the University's task to encourage ethical scholarship and to inform students and staff about the institutional standards of academic behaviour expected of them in learning, teaching and research. Students have a responsibility to maintain the highest standards of academic integrity in their work. Students must not cheat in examinations or other forms of assessment and must ensure they do not plagiarise.
Plagiarism
The University has adopted the following definition of plagiarism:
Plagiarism is the act of misrepresenting as one's own original work the ideas, interpretations, words or creative works of another. These include published and unpublished documents, designs, music, sounds, images, photographs, computer codes and ideas gained through working in a group. These ideas, interpretations, words or works may be found in print and/or electronic media.
Students are encouraged to read the UQ Academic Integrity and Plagiarism policy (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25128) which makes a comprehensive statement about the University's approach to plagiarism, including the approved use of plagiarism detection software, the consequences of plagiarism and the principles associated with preventing plagiarism.
As a student you have a responsibility to incorporate feedback into your learning; make use of the assessment criteria that you are given; be aware of the rules, policies and other documents related to assessment; and provide teachers with feedback on their assessment practices.
There are certain steps you can take if you feel your result does not reflect your performance. Please refer to the myAdvisor web site. (http://www.uq.edu.au/myadvisor/index.html?page=2953)Further to the statement on academic integrity and plagiarism above, students are required to read and understand the ITEE policy on Student Misconduct (http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/about_ITEE/policies/student-misconduct.html).
The policy and procedure for late arrival or non-attendance at centrally controlled and school-based examinations is set out in the University's Assessment policy (HUPP 3.30.1), section 4.8 at http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25109.
Where an adjustment is made to an accredited program, it is the responsibility of the relevant Faculty to liaise with professional and registration bodies regarding the acceptability of the change/s.
Below is a table showing the relationship between the learning objectives for this course and the broader graduate attributes developed, the learning activities used to develop each objective and the assessment task used to assess each objective.
| Learning Objectives | |||||||||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | |
| Learning Activities | |||||||||||||
| Weekly lectures (Lecture) |
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| Weekly tutorials (Tutorial) |
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| Practicals (Practical) |
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| Assessment Tasks | |||||||||||||
| Assignment 1 |
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| Assignment 2 |
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| Final exam |
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| Learning Objectives | |||||||||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | |
| Graduate Attributes | |||||||||||||
| A IN-DEPTH KNOWLEDGE OF THE FIELD OF STUDY | |||||||||||||
| A2. A broad understanding of the field of study, including how other disciplines relate to the field of study. |
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| A3. A comprehensive and in-depth knowledge in the field of study. | |||||||||||||
| A5. An international perspective on the field of study. | |||||||||||||
| A7. An appreciation of the link between theory and practice. | |||||||||||||
| B EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION | |||||||||||||
| B1. The ability to collect, analyse and organise information and ideas and to convey those ideas clearly and fluently, in both written and spoken forms. |
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| B2. The ability to interact effectively with others in order to work towards a common outcome. | |||||||||||||
| B3. The ability to select and use the appropriate level, style and means of communication. | |||||||||||||
| B4. The ability to engage effectively and appropriately with information and communication technologies. | |||||||||||||
| B5. The ability to practise as part of an interdisciplinary team. | |||||||||||||
| C INDEPENDENCE AND CREATIVITY | |||||||||||||
| C2. The ability to work and learn independently and effectively. |
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| C3. The ability to generate ideas and adapt innovatively to changing environments. | |||||||||||||
| C5. The ability to formulate and investigate problems, create solutions, innovate and improve current practices. |
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| C6. The abilities and skills that provide a foundation for future leadership roles. | |||||||||||||
| D CRITICAL JUDGEMENT | |||||||||||||
| D2. The ability to apply critical reasoning to issues through independent thought and informed judgement. |
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| D4. The ability to process material and to critically analyse and integrate information from a wide range of sources. | |||||||||||||
| D5. The ability to evaluate opinions, make decisions and to reflect critically on the justifications for decisions using an evidence-based approach. |
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| E ETHICAL AND SOCIAL UNDERSTANDING | |||||||||||||
| E1. An understanding of social and civic responsibility. |
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| E3. An appreciation of the philosophical and social contexts of a discipline. | |||||||||||||
| E4. A knowledge and respect of ethics and ethical standards in relation to a major area of study. | |||||||||||||
| E5. A knowledge of other cultures and times and an appreciation of cultural diversity. | |||||||||||||
| E7. The ability to work effectively and sensitively across all areas of society. | |||||||||||||
| E8. An understanding of and respect for the roles and expertise of associated disciplines. | |||||||||||||
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Authorised by: Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic) Maintained by: Software Services Last Updated - 24 May , 2006 |