Scheme of examination



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Data and Access Control: views in centralised and distributed DBMS, Data security, Semantic Integrity Control.

[T1, R1][No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT II

Query Processing: Characterization of query processors, Layers of query processing, Query Decomposition: Normalization, Analysis, Elimination of redundancy,

Data Localization: Reduction of primary horizontal fragmentation, Reduction of vertical fragmentation, reduction of derived fragmentation, hybrid fragmentation.

Optimization of Distributed Query: Join ordering, Semi join based algorithms, optimization

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT III

Transaction Management: Properties of transactions, Types of transactions- flat transactions, nested transactions, workflow.

Distributed Concurrency Control: Serializability theory, Locking based concurrency control Algorithm, Tim-stamp based algorithms,

Deadlock Management: Prevention, Avoidance, Detection and Resolution

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT IV

Distributed DBMS Reliability: Local Reliability protocol, Distributed Reliability protocol- two phase commit protocol, three phase commit protocol.

Parallel Database System: System architecture, Parallel query processing, Load Balancing, Database Clusters.

Web Data Management: Web Search-crawling, indexing ranking, Web Querying, Distributed XML Processing.



[T1, R2][No. of Hours: 11]

Text Books:

[T1] Principles of Distributed Database Systems. Ozsu and Valduriez. Prentice Hall.

[T2] Distributed Database Principles and Systems. Ceri and Pelagatti. McGraw Hill.
Reference Books:

[R1] Distributed Systems: Concept and Design. Coulouris, Dollimore, and Kindberg. AW.

[R2] Recovery Mechanisms in Database Systems. Kumar and Hsu, Prentice Hall.

[R3] Concurrency Control and Recovery in Database Systems. Bernstein, Hadzilacos and Goodman, AW



SEMANTIC WEB TECHNOLOGIES
Paper Code: ETIT-411 L T/P C

Paper: Semantic Web Technologies 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objective: This is the aim behind the Semantic Web, which is also being referred to as Web 3.0 and which is heavily embedded in the Artificial Intelligence area. Its long-term goal is that of enhancing the human and machine interaction by representing the data in an understandable way for the machine.

UNIT-I

Introduction: Why Semantics-Data integration across the web, Traditional data modelling methods, semantic relationships, metadata, Building models, Calculating with knowledge, Exchanging information, Semantic web technology.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT-II

RDF Resource description language: Simple Ontology’s in RDF and RDF schema- Introduction, syntax for RDF, advanced features, Simple ontology’s in RDF schemas.

RDF Formal semantics: Why semantics, Model theoretic semantic for RDF(S), Semantic reasoning with deduction rules, the semantic limits of RDF(S).

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 12]

UNIT-III

Web Ontology Languages (OWL): OWL syntax and intuitive semantics, owl species, Description logics, Model theoretic semantics of owl, Automated Reasoning with OWL.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT-IV

Rules and Queries: Ontology and Rules-What is Rule, Data log as a first order rule language, Combining Rules with OWL-DL, Rule interchange format RIF.

Query Language: SPARQL-Query language for RDF, Conjunctive queries for OWL-DL.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 12]

Text Books:

[T1] Foundation Of Semantic Web Technology:-Pascal Hitzler, Marcus Krotzsch, Sebastion Rudolph.by Chapman and Hall Book(CRC Press).

[T2] Programming The Semantic Web:-Toby Segaran, Colin Evans, Jamie Taylor by O’Reilly Media Publication.
Reference Books:

[R1] A Semantic Web Primer MIT Press.

[R2] Knowledge Representation: Logical, Philosophical, and Computational Foundations, John Sowa,(ISBN-13:978-0534949655

[R3] Foundations of Semantic Web Technologies, Pascal Hitzler, Markus Krotzsch, Sebastian Rudolph (ISBN:978-1-4200-9059-5).

[R4] Agency and the Semantic Web, Christopher Walton, ISBN-13: 978-0199292486.

[R5] Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, 3rd Edition, Stuart Russell, Peter Norvig

(ISBN-13:978-0-13-604259-4).

SOFTWARE TESTING
Paper Code: ETIT-413 L T/P C

Paper: Software Testing 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objective: To introduce the students about the knowledge of software testing, types of testing and testing tools.
UNIT I

Introduction: What is software testing and why it is so hard?, Error, Fault, Failure, Incident, Test Cases, Testing Process, Limitations of Testing, No absolute proof of correctness, Overview of Graph Theory.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT II

Functional Testing: Boundary Value Analysis, Equivalence Class Testing, Decision Table Based Testing, Cause Effect Graphing Technique.

Structural Testing: Path testing, DD-Paths, Cyclomatic Complexity, Graph Metrics, Data Flow Testing, Mutation testing.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT III

Reducing the number of test cases:

Prioritization guidelines, Priority category, Scheme, Risk Analysis, Regression Testing, Slice based testing



Testing Activities: Unit Testing, Levels of Testing, Integration Testing, System Testing, Debugging, Domain Testing.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT IV

Object Oriented Testing: Issues in Object Oriented Testing, Class Testing, GUI Testing, Object Oriented Integration and System Testing.

Testing Tools: Static Testing Tools, Dynamic Testing Tools, Characteristics of Modern Tools.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

Text Books:

[T1] William Perry, “Effective Methods for Software Testing”, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1995.

[T2] Cem Kaner, Jack Falk, Nguyen Quoc, “Testing Computer Software”, Second Edition, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1993.

[T3] Boris Beizer, “Software Testing Techniques”, Second Volume, Second Edition, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1990.

[T4] Louise Tamres, “Software Testing”, Pearson Education Asia, 2002

 

Reference Books:

[R1] Roger S. Pressman, “Software Engineering – A Practitioner’s Approach”, Fifth Edition, McGraw-Hill International Edition, New Delhi, 2001.

[R2] Boris Beizer, “Black-Box Testing – Techniques for Functional Testing of Software and Systems”, John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York, 1995.

[R3] K.K. Aggarwal & Yogesh Singh, “Software Engineering”, New Age International Publishers, New Delhi, 2003.

[R4] Marc Roper, “Software Testing”, McGraw-Hill Book Co., London, 1994.

[R5] Gordon Schulmeyer, “Zero Defect Software”, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1990.

[R6] Watts Humphrey, “Managing the Software Process”, Addison Wesley Pub. Co. Inc., Massachusetts, 1989.

[R7] Boris Beizer, “Software System Testing and Quality Assurance”, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1984.

[R8] Glenford Myers, “The Art of Software Testing”, John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York, 1979.



DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING
Paper Code: ETIT-415 L T/P C

Paper: Digital Signal Processing 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objectives: The aim of this course is to provide in depth knowledge of various digital signal processing techniques and design of digital filters, learn the concept of DFT FFT algorithms, and design of digital filters using different approximations, DSP processor and architecture. The prerequisites of this subject are basic knowledge of signal and systems.
UNIT–I :

Frequency Domain Sampling: The Discrete Fourier Transform, Properties of the DFT, Linear filtering methods based of the DFT.

Efficient computation of the DFT: Principal Of FFT, Fast Fourier Transform Algorithms, Applications of FFT Algorithms, A linear filtering approach to computation of the DFT.

Application of DFT, Design of Notch filter



[T2,T1][No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT–II:

Design & Structure of IIR filters from analog filters: Impulse Invariance; Bilinear transformation and its use in design of Butterworth and Chebyshev IIR Filters; Frequency transformation in Digital Domain, Direct, Cascade, Parallel & transposed structure

Design & structure of FIR filters: Symmetric and anti-symmetric FIR filters; Design of Linear Phase FIR filters using windows, Frequency Sampling Method of FIR design, Direct, Cascade, Frequency Sampling, transposed structure

[T1,T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT–III:

Implementation of Discrete Time Systems:

Lattice structures, Lattice and Lattice-Ladder Structures, Schur - Cohn stability Test for IIR filters; Discrete Hilbert Transform.



Linear predictive Coding:

Lattice filter design, Levension Darwin Technique, Schur Algorithm



[T1,T2] [No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT–IV:

Quantization Errors in Digital Signal Processing: Representation of numbers, Quantization of filter coefficients, Round-off Effects in digital filters.

Multirate Digital Signal Processing: Decimation, Interpolation, Sampling rate conversion by a rational factor; Frequency domain characterization of Interpolator and Decimator; Polyphase decomposition.

[T1, T2][No. of Hours: 10]

Text Books:

[T1] Oppenheim & Schafer, Digital Signal Processing, PHI-latest edition.

[T2] Proakis and Manolakis, Digital Signal Processing, PHI Publication
Reference Books:

[R1] S. K. Mitra, Digital Signal Processing, TMH edition 2006

[R2] Johny. R. Johnson, Introduction to Digital Signal Processing, PHI-latest edition

[R3] R.Babu ,Digital Signal Processing , SciTech Publication.


.NET AND C# PROGRAMMING
Paper Code: ETIT-419 L T/P C

Paper: .NET and C# Programming 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objective: This course provides a solid foundation in the C# programming language, and covering the fundamental skills that are required to design and develop object- oriented applications for the web and Microsoft Windows by using Microsoft Visual C# .NET and the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET development environment.
UNIT I

MS.NET Framework Introduction: Framework Components, Framework Versions, Types of Applications which can be developed, Base Class Library, Namespaces, MSIL / Metadata and PE files, The Common Language Runtime (CLR), Managed Code, MS.NET Memory Management / Garbage Collection, Common Type System (CTS), Common Language Specification (CLS), Types of JIT Compilers, Security Manager, control application development

Language basics: Why Datatypes, Global, Stack and Heap Memory, Reference Type and Value Type, Datatypes & Variables Declaration, Implicit and Explicit Casting, Checked and Unchecked Blocks – Overflow Checks, Casting between other datatypes, Boxing and Unboxing, Enum and Constant, Operators, Control Statements, Working with Arrays and methods.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT II

Introduction to Object Oriented Features: What is an Object, state of an Object, Lifecycle of an Object, relationship between Class and Object, define Application using Objects, Principles of Object Orientation, Encapsulation, Inheritance, Polymorphism, Encapsulation is binding of State and Behaviour together, Inheritance is based on “is a” relationship, Understanding Polymorphism with Examples.

Constructor & Destructor, Working with "static" Members, Constructor in Inheritance, Type Casting of Reference Types, Static and Dynamic Binding and Virtual Methods, Abstract Class Object as Parent of all classes, Interface, Syntax for Implementation of Interface, Explicit Implementation of Interface members, Types of Inheritance, exceptional handling.



[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT III

Working with Collections and Generics: IList and IDictionary, typesafety issue with ArrayList and Hashtable classes, IEnumerable and IEnumerator, Sorting Items in the collection using IComparable, custom generic classes, Generic Collection Classes.

Operator Overloading, Partial Classes, Importance of Attributes, working with components/assemblies, data stream and files: text stream, binary stream, working with file system, Serialization & Deserialization, multithreading.



[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT IV

WinForms: Introduction, Controls, Menus and Context Menus, Menu Strip, Toolbar Strip, Graphics and GDI, SDI and MDI Applications, Dialog box, Form Inheritance, Developing Custom, Composite and Extended Controls, Data Access using ADO.NET, Data Access using ADO.NET- dataset, XML, debugging and tracing, Delegates & Events: Delegate Declaration, Sample Application, Chat Application using Delegates, += and -= Operator (Events), Chat Application using Delegates and Events, General Syntax for Delegates and Events.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 12]

Text Books:

[T1] Stephen Walther,” ASP.NET 3.5 Unleashed or ASP.NET 4.5 Unleashed,” Pearsons Publication,

[T2] George Shepherd, "Microsoft ASP.NET 3.5 Step by Step", PHI learning Publication Eastern Economy

[T3] Chris Love, Marco Bellinaso,”ASP.NET 3.5 Website Programming Problem - Design – Solution,” Wrox publication 2012


Reference Books:

[R1] George Shepherd, "Microsoft ASP.NET 4.0 Step by Step", PHI learning Publication Eastern Economy

[R2] Imar Spaanjaars," Beginning ASP.NET 3.5 In C# and VB," Wiley / Wrox publication, 2009

[R3] Bill Evjen, Scott Hanselman, Devin Rader, “Professional ASP.NET 3.5 in C# and VB," Wiley publication, 2008



[R4] Matthew MacDonald, “The Complete Reference: ASP.NET”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2002.

[R5] Jason N. Gaylord et al, "Professional ASP.NET 4.5 in C# and VB," wrox publication, 2013



ENTERPRISE COMPUTING IN JAVA
Paper Code: ETIT-421 L T/P C

Paper: Enterprise Computing in JAVA 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objective: In this course student will learn about J2EE technology and will be able to develop dynamic websites. This course will explain how Enterprise JavaBeans (EJBs) contain the application's business logic and business data.

Pre-requisites: Core java

UNIT I

Introduction to J2EE and building J2EE applications, MVC architecture, Introduction to servlets and its life cycle , problems with cgi-perl interface , generic and http servlet , servlet configuration, various session tracking techniques, servlet context, servlet configuration, servlet collaboration.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT II

JSP Basics and Architecture: JSP directives, Scripting elements, standard actions, implicit objects, JSP design strategies.

Struts: Introduction of Struts and its architecture, advantages and application of Struts.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 12]

UNIT III

EJB Fundamentals: Motivation for EJB, EJB Echo system, J2EE technologies, Enterprise beans and types, distributed objects and middleware, developing EJB components, remote local and home interface, bean class and deployment descriptor.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 10]

UNIT IV

Introducing session beans: Session beans life time, statefull and Stateless session beans, lifecycle of session beans.

Introducing Entity beans: Persistence concepts, features of entity beans, entity context,

Introduction to JMS & Message driven beans.



[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 10]

Text Books:

[T1] Ed Roman, Scott W Ambler, Tyler Jewell, “Mastering Enterprise Java Beans”, Wiley, 2nd Ed., 2005.

[T2] Govind Sesadri , “Enterprise Java Computing: Application and Architectures”, Cambridge University Publications, 1999.
Reference Books:

[R1] Ted Neward, “Effective Enterprise Java”, Eddison -Wesley, 2004.

[R2] Jim Farley, William Crawford, “ Java Enterprise in a Nutshell”, O’Reilly and Associates, 3rd Ed.

[R3] Austin Sincock , “Enterprise Java for SAP” , A Press Publications.

[R4] Joe Wigglesworth and McMilan Paula, “Java Programming: Advanced Topic”, Thomson, 3rd Ed., 2003.

[R5] Subrahamanyam Allamaraju, Cedric Buest, “Professional Java Server Programming, J2EE, Apress, 1.3 Ed., 2005.

[R6] Ivan Bayross and Sharanam Shah, “Java Server Programming”, Shroff.

[R7] John Hunt and Chris Loftus, “Guide to J2EE: Enterprise Java” Springer Verlag Publications.

[R8] Govind Seshadri, “Enterprise Java Computing: Application and Architectures”, Cambridge University Press, 1999.


SYSTEM AND NETWORK ADMINISTRATION
Paper Code: ETIT-423 L T/P C

Paper: System and Network Administration 3 0 3

INSTRUCTIONS TO PAPER SETTERS: MAXIMUM MARKS: 75

1. Question No. 1 should be compulsory and cover the entire syllabus. This question should have objective or short answer type questions. It should be of 25 marks.

2. Apart from Question No. 1, rest of the paper shall consist of four units as per the syllabus. Every unit should have two questions. However, student may be asked to attempt only 1 question from each unit. Each question should be of 12.5 marks.


Objective: This course is intended for B.Tech students, who wish to improve skills through hands-on experience in System Administration and Network Administration.
System Administration:

UNIT- I

System Hardware: PC and Server Hardware Architecture, Operating System Administration: UNIX, Windows, MAC OS.

Centralization and Decentralization: Centralized Authentication, Active Directories; LDAP;

Storage: RAID, Storage Area Network (SAN), Direct Attached Storage (DAS), Network Attached Storage (NAS); Data Integrity Backup and Recovery.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT- II

Lab Management: System Configuration, Cloning, Monitoring and Administering them; workstations, server, Data centers Data Center Management: Administering, Surveillance, Access Control,

Special Topics: High Performance Computing, Virtualization and Cloud Computing.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

Network Administration:

UNIT- III

Network administrator (definition and functions), Network Planning, Routine system maintenance

Computer Networks: OSI & TCP/IP Model, clean architecture;

Switching & Routing: Layer 2 & Layer 3 switching; Routing; VLAN; Cisco L2 and L3 Switch Configuration; DHCP Configuration; IPv6, Wireless LAN: 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac WiFi; Access Point and Wireless Router configuration.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

UNIT-IV

Internet Architecture: ISP Architecture; DNS Resolution; Content Mirroring, Internet Applications: DNS, Web, Mail, Proxy, NTP;

Perimeter Security: Firewall, UTM,

Network Security: LAN and WLAN Security issues; IP Spoofing; Dictionary Attack; DoS and DDoS Attack; Rogue/Misconfigured/External APs; Network Troubleshooting: ping, traceroute, nslookup, dig, tcpdump; Network Monitoring: SNMP; MRTG.

[T1, T2] [No. of Hours: 11]

Text Books:

[T1] Thomas A Limoli, Christina J. Hogan , Strata R. Chalup " Theory and Practise of System and Network administration " Addison-Wesley Professional; 2 edition 2007

[T2] Subramaniam Mani, Subramanian " Network Management: Principles And Practice" Pearson Education India, 2006
References Books:

[R1] Evi Nemeth, Garth Snyder, Trent R. Hein , Ben Whaley "UNIX and Linux System Administration Handbook" (4th Edition), 2010

[R2] Craig Hunt, "TCP/IP Network Administration" "O'Reilly Media, Inc.", 2002

[R3] Bill McCarty Learning Red Hat Linux "O'Reilly Media, Inc.", 2003



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