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Notes on CPSC 465/565: Theory of Distributed Systems [pdf] (yale.edu)
117 points by losoq on June 15, 2016 | hide | past | favorite | 9 comments


Jim Aspnes also teaches a Randomized Algorithms course, with similarly detailed and well organized notes available: http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/aspnes/classes/469/notes.pdf

He's a fantastic and engaging lecturer as well. I highly recommend taking a course with him if you have the opportunity.


This looks interesting. I've been searching for a modern book which explains the algorithms behind many of the building blocks of modern distributed software such as zookeeper, consul, etcd, mesos, etc.

With a bit of a background in the theory, the tools mentioned above and their alternative add up to a bewildering number of projects, all seemingly doing very similar things.

Just a couple of hours ago I asked a relevant question on SO (unfortunately, it looks like it will be closed soon): http://stackoverflow.com/questions/37843295/book-recommendat...


Check out "Designing Data-Intensive Applications" by Martin Kleppmann - http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920032175.do. It's still work-in-progress, but covers a big chunk of distributed systems material, is up to date and has good reviews. You can read the 10 out of 12 chapters via Safari Books Online.

The downside is that I pre-ordered the book in November, expecting it in April and it now shows November of this year as the release date on Amazon. I'd be surprised to get it this year at all. Haven't found other books of similar scope and recency though, so I guess I'll wait some more.


I agree, an excellent book. I learned a great deal from it.


Yeah, until now I found it discouraging that most freely available material in distributed systems consisted of either reading lists or terse slides. I've seen people compare to the field to the humanities in that reading the primary sources is the main way people learn, but I've never found that easy going.

edit:

And it looks like a similar question has been asked at http://cs.stackexchange.com/questions/4793/start-learning-ab..., with some other recommendations I wasn't aware of.


It's a bit like learning to work on a bicycle by reading physics textbooks.


I have no problem reading the primary sources but where does one who is not in academia without expensive journal access obtain them all? I've tried digging around for pdf's but it seems they're scattered all over the place or locked behind paywalls.


Recommended free online book: http://book.mixu.net/distsys/

Various online lists of further reading: https://gist.github.com/macintux/6227368


Answer it there - You don't want me to steal your stackoverflow points, do ya ;)




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