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Biology and Management of Black Scurf of Potato

Thesis Info

Author

Abdul Rauf

Department

Deptt. of Biological Sciences, QAU.

Program

PhD

Institute

Quaid-i-Azam University

Institute Type

Public

City

Islamabad

Province

Islamabad

Country

Pakistan

Thesis Completing Year

2002

Thesis Completion Status

Completed

Page

168

Subject

Biological Sciences

Language

English

Other

Call No: DISS/Ph.D BIO/1057

Added

2021-02-17 19:49:13

Modified

2023-01-06 19:20:37

ARI ID

1676715054638

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چاند مدھم ہے روشنی کم ہے

چاند مدھم ہے، روشنی کم ہے
خواب دھندلے ہیں، آنکھ بھی نم ہے

عمر حاضر جواں دلوں کا کھیل
عمرِ رفتہ عجیب سا غم ہے

زندگانی نثار تم پہ کروں
وار دوں تم پہ سب مگر کم ہے

زندگی! تیرے آستانے پر
موت آنے سے ایک ماتم ہے

دل بھی چاہے کہ زخم تازہ رہیں
وقت کی راگنی بھی مدھم ہے

جس قدر خواہشیں ہیں سینے میں
خضر کی عمر بھی ہمیں کم ہے

آئو ہم بھی گزار لیں لمحے
سانس رکتی ہے آخری دم ہے

تم فضاؔ ہو جہاں پہ چھا جائو
ہم دھواں ہیں ہمیں یہی غم ہے

غریبوں کی معاشی کفالت میں صحابیات رضی اﷲ عنھن کا کردار

Islamic cardinal precepts include seeking benefaction and patronage of other Muslims. Generally, Islamic history is replete with such munificent and generous personages as were ever geared up to serving humanity, yet the golden era of Islamic history excelled in profusion of such noble persons. When we review the aspect of serving mankind in the life history of the reverend Sahaba (the holy prophet’s disciples), we come to know that they had highly remarkable passions for helping, beneficing, supporting and sustaining their relatives, friends as well as the common run. The level of their charity was so great that they felt felicity and prostrated to Allah in gratitude even after giving away their all possessions and belongings for Allah’s sake only. In fact, the motivation behind this generosity was the attainment of pleasing Allah and the obedience and submission to the holy prophet. They had no iota of worldly voracity or avarice. Therefore, they were ever elated over giving away their assets.

Shared-Clock Protocols for Distributed Systems With a Star Topology

Distributed systems based on “time triggered” (TT) “Shared-Clock” (SC) architectures are the main concern in the research described in this thesis. Such architectures are often employed in safety-critical embedded systems because–if implemented correctly–they can provide a foundation for designs which have very predictable patterns of behaviour. Previous research in this area has explored the development of both single and multi-processor TT designs. In the case of multi-processor designs, the focus has been on “Shared-Clock” (SC) architectures.In SC designs, the Controller Area Network (CAN) protocol – introduced by Robert Bosch GmbH in the 1980s – can provide high levels of reliability at low cost. As a consequence, the CAN protocol has become widely used in many sectors (e.g. automotive and automation) and almost all modern microcontroller families now support this protocol. All previous work on SC protocols has considered designs based on a bus topology. The target of this research was to explore other possibilities by developing novel SC protocols based on a novel star topology. The work had two main motivations: (1) to improve the flexibility of such designs significantly, by facilitating the creation of systems with “tick rates” flexibility on each arm of the star; (2) to improve the reliability of designs based on a shared-clock protocol. In this thesis, three “Time-triggered Co-operative, Shared-Clock” (TTC-SC) protocols are introduced: these are referred to as “TTC-SC5” and “TTC-SC6” which were developed previously. As a contribution of this thesis, the culmination of those two previously developed protocols gave rise to our third novel protocol called the “enhanced TTC-SC7” that embodies capabilities of both its predecessors. The TTC-SC5 protocol was previously developed to address the challenges of co-operative scheduling in TTC-SC designs. TTC-SC5 addressed such challenges through a new strategy known as the “Differential Tick Rate” (DTR) mechanism. Also, the TTC-SC5 protocol countered the Single-Point-of-Failure (SPF) hypothesis for the novel star topology described later in this thesis. As CAN-related hardware has an inherent fault-model, addressing such faults is crucial for the normal operation of SC architectures. Building on TTC-SC5, the TTC-SC6 protocol was developed previously to add additional support for fault management in CAN networks based on a star topology. The TTC-SC6 protocol achieved its fault-confinement and fault-tolerance capabilities through a new strategy which was known as the “Port Guardian” (PG) mechanism. In this thesis, it is argued that the amalgamation of our previously developed techniques in TTCSC5 and TTC-SC6 can considerably improve the flexibility as well as reliability of CAN based distributed systems that employ a shared-clock architecture through our novel enhanced TTCSC7 protocol in one suit. A comparative analysis of the software codes used for CANbus and the migrated CANstar based SC architecture is also a part of this thesis. With such a comparison, we intend to show that code wise bus to star migration through our enhanced TTC-SC7 protocol is easily achievable with less software complexity than the former one.