1,907 research outputs found

    TailoredRE: A Personalized Cloud-based Traffic Redundancy Elimination for Smartphones

    Get PDF
    The exceptional rise in usages of mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets has contributed to a massive increase in wireless network trac both Cellular (3G/4G/LTE) and WiFi. The unprecedented growth in wireless network trac not only strain the battery of the mobile devices but also bogs down the last-hop wireless access links. Interestingly, a signicant part of this data trac exhibits high level of redundancy in them due to repeated access of popular contents in the web. Hence, a good amount of research both in academia and in industries has studied, analyzed and designed diverse systems that attempt to eliminate redundancy in the network trac. Several of the existing Trac Redundancy Elimination (TRE) solutions either does not improve last-hop wireless access links or involves inecient use of compute resources from resource-constrained mobile devices. In this research, we propose TailoredRE, a personalized cloud-based trac redundancy elimination system. The main objective of TailoredRE is to tailor TRE mechanism such that TRE is performed against selected applications rather than application agnostically, thus improving eciency by avoiding caching of unnecessary data chunks. In our system, we leverage the rich resources of the cloud to conduct TRE by ooading most of the operational cost from the smartphones or mobile devices to its clones (proxies) available in the cloud. We cluster the multiple individual user clones in the cloud based on the factors of connectedness among users such as usage of similar applications, common interests in specic web contents etc., to improve the eciency of caching in the cloud. This thesis encompasses motivation, system design along with detailed analysis of the results obtained through simulation and real implementation of TailoredRE system

    Baguette:towards end-to-end service orchestration in heterogeneous networks

    Get PDF
    Network services are the key mechanism for operators to introduce intelligence and generate profit from their infrastructures. The growth of the number of network users and the stricter application network requirements have highlighted a number of challenges in orchestrating services using existing production management and configuration protocols and mechanisms. Recent networking paradigms like Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Function Virtualization (NFV), provide a set of novel control and management interfaces that enable unprecedented automation, flexibility and openness capabilities in operator infrastructure management. This paper presents Baguette, a novel and open service orchestration framework for operators. Baguette supports a wide range of network technologies, namely optical and wired Ethernet technologies, and allows service providers to automate the deployment and dynamic re-optimization of network services. We present the design of the orchestrator and elaborate on the integration of Baguette with existing low-level network and cloud management frameworks

    Progressive Caching System for Video Streaming Services Over Content Centric Network

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a metafile-based progressive caching system over the content-centric networking (CCN) tree that supports seamless video streaming services with a high network utilization. In the proposed caching system, each CCN node uses a metafile made by a scalable caching algorithm for efficient and fast chunk caching management, and the reserved area of the CCN interest/data packet headers is used to deliver caching information among the CCN nodes. Based on this caching information, the proposed caching system determines the caching range of video data to minimize the required peak bandwidth for each link. The proposed caching system is implemented using the NS-3 based named data networking simulator. Furthermore, a real cellular wireless network testbed is realized with C/C++, open sources such as CCNx and Ubuntu MME, and a Raspberry PIs to examine the performance of the proposed caching system. The experiment results demonstrate the performance improvement achieved by the proposed caching system.11Ysciescopu

    Resource management for next generation multi-service mobile network

    Get PDF

    Connectivity and Data Transmission over Wireless Mobile Systems

    Get PDF
    We live in a world where wireless connectivity is pervasive and becomes ubiquitous. Numerous devices with varying capabilities and multiple interfaces are surrounding us. Most home users use Wi-Fi routers, whereas a large portion of human inhabited land is covered by cellular networks. As the number of these devices, and the services they provide, increase, our needs in bandwidth and interoperability are also augmented. Although deploying additional infrastructure and future protocols may alleviate these problems, efficient use of the available resources is important. We are interested in the problem of identifying the properties of a system able to operate using multiple interfaces, take advantage of user locations, identify the users that should be involved in the routing, and setup a mechanism for information dissemination. The challenges we need to overcome arise from network complexity and heterogeneousness, as well as the fact that they have no single owner or manager. In this thesis I focus on two cases, namely that of utilizing "in-situ" WiFi Access Points to enhance the connections of mobile users, and that of establishing "Virtual Access Points" in locations where there is no fixed roadside equipment available. Both environments have attracted interest for numerous related works. In the first case the main effort is to take advantage of the available bandwidth, while in the second to provide delay tolerant connectivity, possibly in the face of disasters. Our main contribution is to utilize a database to store user locations in the system, and to provide ways to use that information to improve system effectiveness. This feature allows our system to remain effective in specific scenarios and tests, where other approaches fail

    Queuing Modelling and Performance Analysis of Content Transfer in Information Centric Networks

    Get PDF
    With the rapid development of multimedia services and wireless technology, new generation of network traffic like short-form video and live streaming have put tremendous pressure on the current network infrastructure. To meet the high bandwidth and low latency needs of this new generation of traffic, the focus of Internet architecture has moved from host-centric end-to-end communication to requester-driven content retrieval. This shift has motivated the development of Information-Centric Networking (ICN), a promising new paradigm for the future Internet. ICN aims to improve information retrieval on the Internet by identifying and routing data using unified names. In-network caching and the use of a pending interest table (PIT) are two key features of ICN that are designed to efficiently handle bulk data dissemination and retrieval, as well as reduce bandwidth consumption. Performance analysis has been and continues to be key research interests of ICN. This thesis starts with the evaluation of content delivery delays in ICN. The main component of delay is composed of propagation delay, transmission delay,processing delay and queueing delay. To characterize the main components of content delivery delay, queueing network theory has been exploited to coordinate with cache miss rate in modelling the content delivery time in ICN. Moreover, different topologies and network conditions have been taken into account to evaluate the performance of content transfer in ICN. ICN is intrinsically compatible with wireless networks. To evaluate the performance of content transfer in wireless networks, an analytical model to evaluate the mean service time based on consumer and provider mobility has been proposed. The accuracy of the analytical model is validated through extensive simulation experiments. Finally, the analytical model is used to evaluate the impact of key metrics, such as the cache size, content size and content popularity on the performance of PIT and content transfer in ICN. Pending interest table (PIT) is one of the essential components of the ICN forwarding plane, which is responsible for stateful routing in ICN. It also aggregates the same interests to alleviate request flooding and network congestion. The aggregation feature of PIT improves performance of content delivery in ICN. Thus, having an analytical model to characterize the impact of PIT on content delivery time could allow for a more precise evaluation of content transfer performance. In parallel, if the size of the PIT is not properly determined, the interest drop rate may be too high, resulting in a reduction in quality of service for consumers as their requests have to be retransmitted. Furthermore, PIT is a costly resource as it requires to operate at wirespeed in the forwarding plane. Therefore, in order to ensure that interests drop rate less than the requirement, an analytical model of PIT occupancy has been developed to determine the minimum PIT size. In this thesis, the proposed analytical models are used to efficiently and accurately evaluate the performance of ICN content transfer and investigate the key component of ICN forwarding plane. Leveraging the insights discovered by these analytical models, the minimal PIT size and proper interest timeout can be determined to enhance the performance of ICN. To widen the outcomes achieved in the thesis, several interesting yet challenging research directions are pointed out
    corecore