224 research outputs found

    Dynamic organization schemes for cooperative proxy caching

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    In a generic cooperative caching architecture, web proxies form a mesh network. When a proxy cannot satisfy a request, it forwards the request to the other nodes of the mesh. Since a local cache cannot fulfill the majority of the arriving requests (typical values of the local hit ratio are about 30-50%), the volume of queries diverted to neighboring nodes can substantially grow and may consume considerable amount of system resources. A proxy does not need to cooperate with every node of the mesh due to the following reasons: (i) the traffic characteristics may be highly diverse; (ii) the contents of some nodes may extensively overlap; (iii) the inter-node distance might be too large. Furthermore, organizing N proxies in a mesh topology introduces scalability problems, since the number of queries is of the order of N/sup 2/. Therefore, restricting the number of neighbors for each proxy to k < N - 1 will likely lead to a balanced trade-off between query overhead and hit ratio, provided cooperation is done among useful neighbors. For a number of reasons the selection of useful neighbors is not efficient. An obvious reason is that web access patterns change dynamically. Furthermore, availability of proxies is not always globally known. This paper proposes a set of algorithms that enable proxies to independently explore the network and choose the k most beneficial (according to local criteria) neighbors in a dynamic fashion. The simulation experiments illustrate that the proposed dynamic neighbor reconfiguration schemes significantly reduce the overhead incurred by the mesh topology while yielding higher hit ratios compared to the static approach.published_or_final_versio

    Mobile Content Delivery Network Design and Implementation

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    In this thesis, a novel concept of Mobile Content Delivery Network is designed and implemented in a real testbed with the target of flexibly adapting the video caching in the cellular network to the users dynamics. New challenges are discussed and practical considerations for wide-scale deployment in next generation cellular networks are drawn

    Evaluating performance of web services in cloud computing environment with high availability

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    This paper presents an methodology for attaining high availability to the demands of the web clients. In order to improve in response time of web services during peak hours dynamic allocation of host nodes will be used in this research work. As web users are very demanding: they expect web services to be quickly accessible from the world 24*7. Fast response time leads to high availability of web services, while slow response time degrades the performance of web services. With the increasing trend of internet, it becomes a part of life. People use internet to help in their studies, business, shopping and many more things. To achieve this objective LAMP platform is used which are Linux, Apache, My SQL, and PHP. LAMP is used to increase the quality of product by using open source software. The proposed strategy will work as middle layer and provide highly availability to the web clients

    A Framework for pervasive web content delivery

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    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

    Distributed Selfish Coaching

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    Although cooperation generally increases the amount of resources available to a community of nodes, thus improving individual and collective performance, it also allows for the appearance of potential mistreatment problems through the exposition of one node's resources to others. We study such concerns by considering a group of independent, rational, self-aware nodes that cooperate using on-line caching algorithms, where the exposed resource is the storage at each node. Motivated by content networking applications -- including web caching, CDNs, and P2P -- this paper extends our previous work on the on-line version of the problem, which was conducted under a game-theoretic framework, and limited to object replication. We identify and investigate two causes of mistreatment: (1) cache state interactions (due to the cooperative servicing of requests) and (2) the adoption of a common scheme for cache management policies. Using analytic models, numerical solutions of these models, as well as simulation experiments, we show that on-line cooperation schemes using caching are fairly robust to mistreatment caused by state interactions. To appear in a substantial manner, the interaction through the exchange of miss-streams has to be very intense, making it feasible for the mistreated nodes to detect and react to exploitation. This robustness ceases to exist when nodes fetch and store objects in response to remote requests, i.e., when they operate as Level-2 caches (or proxies) for other nodes. Regarding mistreatment due to a common scheme, we show that this can easily take place when the "outlier" characteristics of some of the nodes get overlooked. This finding underscores the importance of allowing cooperative caching nodes the flexibility of choosing from a diverse set of schemes to fit the peculiarities of individual nodes. To that end, we outline an emulation-based framework for the development of mistreatment-resilient distributed selfish caching schemes. Our framework utilizes a simple control-theoretic approach to dynamically parameterize the cache management scheme. We show performance evaluation results that quantify the benefits from instantiating such a framework, which could be substantial under skewed demand profiles.National Science Foundation (CNS Cybertrust 0524477, CNS NeTS 0520166, CNS ITR 0205294, EIA RI 0202067); EU IST (CASCADAS and E-NEXT); Marie Curie Outgoing International Fellowship of the EU (MOIF-CT-2005-007230
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