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  1. Proceedings of the 4th ACM SIGPLAN workshop on Commercial users of functional programming (CUFP '07)
  2. Productivity gains with Erlang
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Fourth ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Commercial Users of Functional Programming
Industrial uses of Caml: examples and lessons learned from the smart card industry
The way it ought to work... and sometimes does
The default case in Haskell: counterparty credit risk calculation at ABN AMRO
Ct: channelling NeSL and SISAL in C++
Terrorism response training in scheme
Learning with F#
Productivity gains with Erlang
An OCaml-based network services platform
Using functional techniques to program a network processor
Impediments to wide-spread adoption of functional languages
Functional programming in communications security
Cross-domain WebDAV server
Discussion
CUFP in the future

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Productivity gains with Erlang

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Nyström, Jan Henry
Abstract Currently most distributed telecoms software is engineered using low- and mid-level distributed technologies, but there is a drive to use high-level distribution. This talk reports the first systematic comparison of a high-level distributed programming language in the context of substantial commercial products. The research clearly demonstrates that Erlang is not only a viable, but also a compelling choice when dealing with high availability systems. This is due to the fact that it comparatively easy to construct systems that are: • resilient: sustaining throughput at extreme loads and automatically recovering when load drops; • fault tolerant: remaining available despite repeated and multiple failures; • dynamically reconfigurable: with throughput scaling, near-linearly, when resources are added or removed. But most importantly these systems can be delivered at a much higher productivity and with more maintainable deployment than current technology. This is attributed to language features such as automatic memory and process management and high-level communication. Furthermore, Erlang interoperates at low cost with conventional technologies, allowing incremental reengineering of large distributed systems.
Starting Page 1
Ending Page 2
Page Count 2
File Format PDF
DOI 10.1145/1362702.1362710
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2007-10-04
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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