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DIET is a middleware that was created in 2000[1]. It was designed for high-performance computing. It is currently developed by INRIA, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, SysFera, CNRS, Claude Bernard University Lyon 1. It is open-source software released under the CeCILL license.
Like NetSolve/GridSolve and Ninf, DIET is compliant with the GridRPC standard from the Open Grid Forum[2].
The aim of the DIET project is to develop a set of tools to build computational servers. The distributed resources are managed in a transparent way through the middleware. It can work with workstations, clusters, Grids and Clouds.
DIET is used to manage the Décrypthon Grid installed by IBM in 6 French universities (Bordeaux 1, Lille 1, Paris 6, ENS Lyon, Crihan in Rouen, Orsay).
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