Draft:Distributed system simulator
![]() | Review waiting, please be patient.
This may take 3 months or more, since drafts are reviewed in no specific order. There are 2,693 pending submissions waiting for review.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
Reviewer tools
|
Submission declined on 19 April 2025 by Johannes Maximilian (talk). This submission is not adequately supported by reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be verified. If you need help with referencing, please see Referencing for beginners and Citing sources.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
This draft has been resubmitted and is currently awaiting re-review. | ![]() |
A distributed system simulator is a software tool used to model and imitate the behavior of distributed systems in a virtual environment.[1] These simulators allow developers, engineers, and researchers to evaluate, test[2], and optimize distributed architectures without needing to deploy them in physical or production systems.[3] By offering an environment to simulate real-world behaviors[4]—such as message passing, node failures, latency variations, and concurrency—distributed system simulators make it easier to develop and debug complex systems under safe and repeatable conditions.[3]
One of the core advantages of these tools is the ability to test distributed systems without risking data loss, hardware failure, or unintended side effects.[1] Simulators also allow developers to reproduce rare or difficult-to-trigger bugs by artificially recreating specific network conditions or execution sequences that might be hard to observe in live environments.[4] This capability makes them a valuable resource for both academic research and production-grade engineering, especially when evaluating the reliability, fault tolerance, and scalability of distributed algorithms[4].
References
[edit]- ^ a b Connors, Michael M.; Coray, Claude; Cuccaro, Carol J.; Green, William K.; Low, David W.; Markowitz, Harry M. (April 1972). "The Distribution System Simulator". Management Science. 18 (8): B–425. doi:10.1287/mnsc.18.8.B425. ISSN 0025-1909.
- ^ King, Jayden; Kim, Young Ki; Lee, Young Choon; Hong, Seok-Hee (December 2019). "Visualisation of Distributed Systems Simulation Made Simple". 2019 IEEE International Conference on Cloud Computing Technology and Science (CloudCom): 309–312. doi:10.1109/CloudCom.2019.00053.
- ^ a b "The Modern Age of Computer Systems Simulation — SimGrid documentation". simgrid.org. Retrieved 2025-04-20.
- ^ a b c "Simulation: An Underutilized Tool in Distributed Systems - ACM Queue". queue.acm.org. Retrieved 2025-04-20.