A Biologically Inspired Programming Model for Self-Healing Systems
Selvin George, David Evans and Lance Davidson
Workshop on
Self-Healing Systems (WOSS'02)
November, 2002
Abstract
There is an increasing need for software systems to be able to adapt to
changing conditions of resource variability, component malfunction and
malicious intrusion. Such self-healing systems can prove extremely
useful in situations where continuous service is critical or manual
repair is not feasible. Human efforts to engineer self-healing systems
have had limited success, but nature has developed extraordinary
mechanisms for robustness and self-healing over billions of
years. Nature's programs are encoded in DNA and exhibit remarkable
density and expressiveness. We argue that the software engineering
community can learn a great deal about building systems from the broader
concepts surrounding biological cell programs and the strategies they
use to robustly accomplish complex tasks such as development, healing
and regeneration. We present a cell-based programming model inspired
from biology and speculate on biologically inspired strategies for
producing robust, scalable and self-healing software systems.
Keywords: Biological programming; self-healing systems; amorphous computing.
Complete Paper (3 pages)
[PDF]
[PS]
Talk
Slides [PPT] [PDF]
Swarm Project Page