4 research outputs found

    An experimental study of client-side Spotify peering behaviour

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    Spotify is a popular music-streaming service which has seen widespread use across Europe. While Spotify’s server-side behaviour has previously been studied, little is known about the client-side behaviour. In this paper, we describe an experimental study where we collect packet headers for Spotify traffic over multiple 24-hour time frames at a client host. Two distinct types of behaviour are observed, when tracks are being downloaded, and when the client is only serving requests from other peers. We also note wide variation in connection lifetimes, as seen in other studies of peer-to-peer systems. These findings are relevant for improving Spotify itself, and for the designers of other hybrid peer-to-peer and server-based distribution architectures

    Distribuição de conteúdos over-the-top multimédia em redes sem fios

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    mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e TelecomunicaçõesHoje em dia a Internet é considerada um bem essencial devido ao facto de haver uma constante necessidade de comunicar, mas também de aceder e partilhar conteúdos. Com a crescente utilização da Internet, aliada ao aumento da largura de banda fornecida pelos operadores de telecomunicações, criaram-se assim excelentes condições para o aumento dos serviços multimédia Over-The-Top (OTT), demonstrado pelo o sucesso apresentado pelos os serviços Netflix e Youtube. O serviço OTT engloba a entrega de vídeo e áudio através da Internet sem um controlo direto dos operadores de telecomunicações, apresentando uma proposta atractiva de baixo custo e lucrativa. Embora a entrega OTT seja cativante, esta padece de algumas limitações. Para que a proposta se mantenha em crescimento e com elevados padrões de Qualidade-de-Experiência (QoE) para os consumidores, é necessário investir na arquitetura da rede de distribuição de conteúdos, para que esta seja capaz de se adaptar aos diversos tipos de conteúdo e obter um modelo otimizado com um uso cauteloso dos recursos, tendo como objectivo fornecer serviços OTT com uma boa qualidade para o utilizador, de uma forma eficiente e escalável indo de encontro aos requisitos impostos pelas redes móveis atuais e futuras. Esta dissertação foca-se na distribuição de conteúdos em redes sem fios, através de um modelo de cache distribuída entre os diferentes pontos de acesso, aumentando assim o tamanho da cache e diminuindo o tráfego necessário para os servidores ou caches da camada de agregação acima. Assim, permite-se uma maior escalabilidade e aumento da largura de banda disponível para os servidores de camada de agregação acima. Testou-se o modelo de cache distribuída em três cenários: o consumidor está em casa em que se considera que tem um acesso fixo, o consumidor tem um comportamento móvel entre vários pontos de acesso na rua, e o consumidor está dentro de um comboio em alta velocidade. Testaram-se várias soluções como Redis2, Cachelot e Memcached para servir de cache, bem como se avaliaram vários proxies para ir de encontro ás características necessárias. Mais ainda, na distribuição de conteúdos testaram-se dois algoritmos, nomeadamente o Consistent e o Rendezvouz Hashing. Ainda nesta dissertação utilizou-se uma proposta já existente baseada na previsão de conteúdos (prefetching ), que consiste em colocar o conteúdo nas caches antes de este ser requerido pelos consumidores. No final, verificou-se que o modelo distribuído com a integração com prefecthing melhorou a qualidade de experiência dos consumidores, bem como reduziu a carga nos servidores de camada de agregação acima.Nowadays, the Internet is considered an essential good, due to the fact that there is a need to communicate, but also to access and share information. With the increasing use of the Internet, allied with the increased bandwidth provided by telecommunication operators, it has created conditions for the increase of Over-the-Top (OTT) Multimedia Services, demonstrated by the huge success of Net ix and Youtube. The OTT service encompasses the delivery of video and audio through the Internet without direct control of telecommunication operators, presenting an attractive low-cost and pro table proposal. Although the OTT delivery is captivating, it has some limitations. In order to increase the number of clients and keep the high Quality of Experience (QoE) standards, an enhanced architecture for content distribution network is needed. Thus, the enhanced architecture needs to provide a good quality for the user, in an e cient and scalable way, supporting the requirements imposed by future mobile networks. This dissertation aims to approach the content distribution in wireless networks, through a distributed cache model among the several access points, thus increasing the cache size and decreasing the load on the upstream servers. The proposed architecture was tested in three di erent scenarios: the consumer is at home and it is considered that it has a xed access, the consumer is mobile between several access points in the street, the consumer is in a high speed train. Several solutions were evaluated, such as Redis2, Cachelot and Memcached to serve as caches, along with the evaluation of several proxies server in order to ful ll the required features. Also, it was tested two distributed algorithms, namely the Consistent and Rendezvous Hashing. Moreover, in this dissertation it was integrated a prefetching mechanism, which consists of inserting the content in caches before being requested by the consumers. At the end, it was veri ed that the distributed model with prefetching improved the consumers QoE as well as it reduced the load on the upstream servers

    User-Centric Quality of Service Provisioning in IP Networks

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    The Internet has become the preferred transport medium for almost every type of communication, continuing to grow, both in terms of the number of users and delivered services. Efforts have been made to ensure that time sensitive applications receive sufficient resources and subsequently receive an acceptable Quality of Service (QoS). However, typical Internet users no longer use a single service at a given point in time, as they are instead engaged in a multimedia-rich experience, comprising of many different concurrent services. Given the scalability problems raised by the diversity of the users and traffic, in conjunction with their increasing expectations, the task of QoS provisioning can no longer be approached from the perspective of providing priority to specific traffic types over coexisting services; either through explicit resource reservation, or traffic classification using static policies, as is the case with the current approach to QoS provisioning, Differentiated Services (Diffserv). This current use of static resource allocation and traffic shaping methods reveals a distinct lack of synergy between current QoS practices and user activities, thus highlighting a need for a QoS solution reflecting the user services. The aim of this thesis is to investigate and propose a novel QoS architecture, which considers the activities of the user and manages resources from a user-centric perspective. The research begins with a comprehensive examination of existing QoS technologies and mechanisms, arguing that current QoS practises are too static in their configuration and typically give priority to specific individual services rather than considering the user experience. The analysis also reveals the potential threat that unresponsive application traffic presents to coexisting Internet services and QoS efforts, and introduces the requirement for a balance between application QoS and fairness. This thesis proposes a novel architecture, the Congestion Aware Packet Scheduler (CAPS), which manages and controls traffic at the point of service aggregation, in order to optimise the overall QoS of the user experience. The CAPS architecture, in contrast to traditional QoS alternatives, places no predetermined precedence on a specific traffic; instead, it adapts QoS policies to each individual’s Internet traffic profile and dynamically controls the ratio of user services to maintain an optimised QoS experience. The rationale behind this approach was to enable a QoS optimised experience to each Internet user and not just those using preferred services. Furthermore, unresponsive bandwidth intensive applications, such as Peer-to-Peer, are managed fairly while minimising their impact on coexisting services. The CAPS architecture has been validated through extensive simulations with the topologies used replicating the complexity and scale of real-network ISP infrastructures. The results show that for a number of different user-traffic profiles, the proposed approach achieves an improved aggregate QoS for each user when compared with Best effort Internet, Traditional Diffserv and Weighted-RED configurations. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that the proposed architecture not only provides an optimised QoS to the user, irrespective of their traffic profile, but through the avoidance of static resource allocation, can adapt with the Internet user as their use of services change.France Teleco
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