650 research outputs found

    Peer to Peer Information Retrieval: An Overview

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    Peer-to-peer technology is widely used for file sharing. In the past decade a number of prototype peer-to-peer information retrieval systems have been developed. Unfortunately, none of these have seen widespread real- world adoption and thus, in contrast with file sharing, information retrieval is still dominated by centralised solutions. In this paper we provide an overview of the key challenges for peer-to-peer information retrieval and the work done so far. We want to stimulate and inspire further research to overcome these challenges. This will open the door to the development and large-scale deployment of real-world peer-to-peer information retrieval systems that rival existing centralised client-server solutions in terms of scalability, performance, user satisfaction and freedom

    Ontology-based Search Algorithms over Large-Scale Unstructured Peer-to-Peer Networks

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    Peer-to-Peer(P2P) systems have emerged as a promising paradigm to structure large scale distributed systems. They provide a robust, scalable and decentralized way to share and publish data.The unstructured P2P systems have gained much popularity in recent years for their wide applicability and simplicity. However efficient resource discovery remains a fundamental challenge for unstructured P2P networks due to the lack of a network structure. To effectively harness the power of unstructured P2P systems, the challenges in distributed knowledge management and information search need to be overcome. Current attempts to solve the problems pertaining to knowledge management and search have focused on simple term based routing indices and keyword search queries. Many P2P resource discovery applications will require more complex query functionality, as users will publish semantically rich data and need efficiently content location algorithms that find target content at moderate cost. Therefore, effective knowledge and data management techniques and search tools for information retrieval are imperative and lasting. In my dissertation, I present a suite of protocols that assist in efficient content location and knowledge management in unstructured Peer-to-Peer overlays. The basis of these schemes is their ability to learn from past peer interactions and increasing their performance with time.My work aims to provide effective and bandwidth-efficient searching and data sharing in unstructured P2P environments. A suite of algorithms which provide peers in unstructured P2P overlays with the state necessary in order to efficiently locate, disseminate and replicate objects is presented. Also, Existing approaches to federated search are adapted and new methods are developed for semantic knowledge representation, resource selection, and knowledge evolution for efficient search in dynamic and distributed P2P network environments. Furthermore,autonomous and decentralized algorithms that reorganizes an unstructured network topology into a one with desired search-enhancing properties are proposed in a network evolution model to facilitate effective and efficient semantic search in dynamic environments

    Data sharing in DHT based P2P systems

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    International audienceThe evolution of peer-to-peer (P2P) systems triggered the building of large scale distributed applications. The main application domain is data sharing across a very large number of highly autonomous participants. Building such data sharing systems is particularly challenging because of the "extreme" characteristics of P2P infrastructures: massive distribution, high churn rate, no global control, potentially untrusted participants... This article focuses on declarative querying support, query optimization and data privacy on a major class of P2P systems, that based on Distributed Hash Table (P2P DHT). The usual approaches and the algorithms used by classic distributed systems and databases forproviding data privacy and querying services are not well suited to P2P DHT systems. A considerable amount of work was required to adapt them for the new challenges such systems present. This paper describes the most important solutions found. It also identies important future research trends in data management in P2P DHT systems

    Search strategies in unstructured overlays

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    Trabalho de projecto de mestrado em Engenharia Informática, apresentado à Universidade de Lisboa, através da Faculdade de Ciências, 2008Unstructured peer-to-peer networks have a low maintenance cost, high resilience and tolerance to the continuous arrival and departure of nodes. In these networks search is usually performed by flooding, which generates a high number of duplicate messages. To improve scalability, unstructured overlays evolved to a two-tiered architecture where regular nodes rely on special nodes, called supernodes or superpeers, to locate resources, thus reducing the scope of flooding based searches. While this approach takes advantage of node heterogeneity, it makes the overlay less resilient to accidental and malicious faults, and less attractive to users concerned with the consumption of their resources and who may not desire to commit additional resources that are required by nodes selected as superpeers. Another point of concern is churn, defined as the constant entry and departure of nodes. Churn affects both structured and unstructured overlay networks and, in order to build resilient search protocols, it must be taken into account. This dissertation proposes a novel search algorithm, called FASE, which combines a replication policy and a search space division technique to achieve low hop counts using a small number of messages, on unstructured overlays with nonhierarquical topologies. The problem of churn is mitigated by a distributed monitoring algorithm designed with FASE in mind. Simulation results validate FASE efficiency when compared to other search algorithms for peer-to-peer networks. The evaluation of the distributed monitoring algorithm shows that it maintains FASE performance when subjected to churn.Os sistemas peer-to-peer, como aplicações de partilha e distribuição de conteúdos ou voz-sobre-IP, são construídos sobre redes sobrepostas. Redes sobrepostas são redes virtuais que existem sobre uma rede subjacente, em que a topologia da rede sobreposta não tem de ter uma correspondência com a topologia da rede subjacente. Ao contrário das suas congéneres estruturadas, as redes sobrepostas não-estru-turadas não restringem a localização dos seus participantes, ou seja, não limitam a escolha de vizinhos de um dado nó, o que torna a sua manutenção mais simples. O baixo custo de manutenção das redes sobrepostas não-estruturadas torna estas especialmente adequadas para a construção de sistemas peer-to-peer capazes de tolerar o comportamento dinâmico dos seus participantes, uma vez que estas redes são permanentemente afectadas pela entrada e saída de nós na rede, um fénomeno conhecido como churn. O algoritmo de pesquisa mais comum em redes sobrepostas não-estruturadas consiste em inundar a rede, o que origina uma grande quantidade de mensagens duplicadas por cada pesquisa. A escalabilidade destes algoritmos é limitada porque consomem demasiados recursos da rede em sistemas com muitos participantes. Para reduzir o número de mensagens, as redes sobrepostas não-estruturadas podem ser organizadas em topologias hierárquicas. Nestas topologias alguns nós da rede, chamados supernós, assumem um papel mais importante, responsabilizando-se pela localização de objectos. A utilização de supernós cria novos problemas, como a sua selecção e a dependência da rede de uma pequena percentagem dos nós. Esta dissertação apresenta um novo algoritmo de pesquisa, chamado FASE, criado para operar sobre redes sobrepostas não estruturadas com topologias não-hierárquicas. Este algoritmo combina uma política de replicação com uma técnica de divisão do espaço de procura para resolver pesquisas ao alcançe de um número reduzido de saltos com o menor custo possível. Adicionalmente, o algoritmo procura nivelar a contribuição dos participantes, já que todos contribuem de uma forma semelhante para o desempenho da pesquisa. A estratégia seguida pelo algo- ritmo consiste em dividir tanto os nós da rede como as chaves dos seus conteúdos por diferentes “frequências” e replicar chaves nas respectivas frequências, sem, no entanto, limitar a localização de um nó ou impor uma estrutura à rede ou mesmo aplicar uma definição rígida de chave. Com o objectivo de mitigar o problema do churn, é apresentado um algoritmo de monitorização distribuído para as réplicas originadas pelo FASE. Os algoritmos propostos são avaliados através de simulações, que validam a eficiência do FASE quando comparado com outros algoritmos de pesquisa em redes sobrepostas não-estruturadas. É também demonstrado que o FASE mantém o seu desempenho em redes sob o efeito do churn quando combinado com o algoritmo de monitorização

    Content Distribution in P2P Systems

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    The report provides a literature review of the state-of-the-art for content distribution. The report's contributions are of threefold. First, it gives more insight into traditional Content Distribution Networks (CDN), their requirements and open issues. Second, it discusses Peer-to-Peer (P2P) systems as a cheap and scalable alternative for CDN and extracts their design challenges. Finally, it evaluates the existing P2P systems dedicated for content distribution according to the identied requirements and challenges

    Enhancing P2P File-Sharing with an Internet-Scale Query Processor

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