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TACO is a toolkit for building distributed control systems or any other distributed system. It is based on a C/C++ core. It is based on the client-server model. It supports writing clients and server on Unix+Windows. Clients and servers can be written in
Scalable, distributed monitoring system for high-performance computing
Ganglia is a scalable distributed monitoring system for high-performance computing systems such as clusters and Grids. It is based on a hierarchical design targeted at federations of clusters. Supports clusters up to 2000 nodes in size.
The MUSCLE system is a fast, portable, flexible client-server system for distributed applications. Clients send BMessage-like PortableMessages to each other either directly or via a centralized server (with built-in database and 'live query' support).
Framework for software component integration, interoperability and adoptability through a XML based vocabulary: Software Component Integration Mark-up Language (SCIML)
The Job Jar is a simple batch queuing system for Unix. Its main
distinguishing feature is that there is no central daemon. Instead, an
arbitrary set of workers cooperatively claim jobs from a central
directory. A job is any Unix executable file.