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Programming Assignment 1 Solution

The goal of this assignment is to implement clock synchronization in distributed systems as well as gain experience with using ONC RPC and understand the overhead RPC incurs.




Your task is to experiment with a client/server program in which a client sends a request to a server and receives a reply from that server. The client records local clock times of when the request was sent and when the corresponding reply was received, and also learns the (server) clock times of when the server received that request and sent its reply.




Implement two versions of this client/server program:




Version 1: Use UDP for communication. There are plenty of UDP client/server programs available on the Internet. You may use one of these. Of course, make sure that you understand the code and the code is working correctly before you use it.




Version 2 : Use ONC RPC for communication. Again, there are plenty of RPC-based programs available on the Internet. You may use one of these. Make sure that you understand the code and the code is working correctly before you use it.




For each version, collect timing data for three different scenarios:




Client and server are running on the same machine



Client and server are running on different machines with in the CU-Boulder campus
Client and server are running on different machines, one in CU campus and the other at a different geographic location outside the CU campus, preferably on a different continent



For each scenario, repeat your measurements every minute over a period of two hours.




Question 1: Compute roundtrip latencies along with average and standard deviation for each scenario, and plot them in a graph. Provide an analysis of your results in terms of why there is a variation in latencies, which ones you expect to be more accurate, etc.




Question 2: How much performance overhead does RPC incur under different scenarios? Provide an explanation of this overhead. Your answer must be based on the data you have collected.

Question 3: Compute the offset (oi) and delay (di) for each of the measurements for




each scenario using the NTP formula and plot them in a graph (x-axis: measurement #;




y-axis: oi or di). Provide an analysis of your results. What difference do you see in your estimates between the two versions of your program? Based on your data, can you justify the statement: The shorter and more symmetric the round-trip time is, the more accurate the estimate of the current time.




Question 4: Compute server clock time estimate using the Cristian’s clock synchronization algorithm, and plot the difference between the local clock and the estimated server clock values for each scenario. Based on your observations, what is a reasonable estimate of absolute minimum latency between the two machines you used for experiments for different scenarios. Using this estimate, calculate the error bounds for the synchronized time.




Submission and grading guidelines




Please submit a single zip file via the submission link provided on Moodle. Your file must contain the following:



All source code files including a makefile



A README file that includes a description of how to compile and run your program. In addition, include any limitations of your program – what works, what doesn’t, sources of potential errors, etc.



A PDF file that contains answers to the four questions.



Raw measurement data for each scenario in separate files in some reasonable format, e.g. Excel.



You may work in teams of size two students to write the programs and collect data. However, you must answer the four questions individually. Include the name of your team member in the code and writeup you submit.



We will conduct interview grading to grade your assignment. During your interview, we will ask questions related to your code as well as your writeup. Each interview will last for a maximum of 15 minutes.



Interview slots will be posted a few days before the submission deadline and will close at the same time as the submission deadline. You are responsible for ensuring that you do sign up for an interview slot and show up for your interview at your slot time.



Inform us ahead of time if none of the posted interview slots work for you or if you have to miss your interview after signing up for a slot due to some unavoidable circumstances. If you do not sign up for an interview slot or do not show up for interview at your signed-up slot, and haven’t contacted us beforehand, we reserve the right to not grade your assignment or deduct some points from your grade.

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