[Home]Peer-to-peer

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A peer-to-peer application architecture is one in which each node, or logical entity, in the global application (consisting of all of the interoperating peer nodes) may act as either client? or server?, whether in turn (serial? roles) or simultaneously ([parallel roles]?) may be termed a peer-to-peer application architecture, and such applications are often known as peer-to-peer, or P2P "apps".

Many peer-to-peer applications use unequal peers, for example, to provide index or [lookup services]? to the [leaf nodes]?. Typically the [leaf nodes]? will each be an personal computer, but may be anything from a workstation? to a mainframe to a supercomputer?.

Examples of peer-to-peer applications at the time of this writing include:

An earlier generation of peer-to-peer systems were called "metacomputing" or were classed as "middleware". These include:


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Last edited November 22, 2001 5:58 am by Greg Lindahl (diff)
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