404 research outputs found

    Architecture for Cooperative Prefetching in P2P Video-on- Demand System

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    Most P2P VoD schemes focused on service architectures and overlays optimization without considering segments rarity and the performance of prefetching strategies. As a result, they cannot better support VCRoriented service in heterogeneous environment having clients using free VCR controls. Despite the remarkable popularity in VoD systems, there exist no prior work that studies the performance gap between different prefetching strategies. In this paper, we analyze and understand the performance of different prefetching strategies. Our analytical characterization brings us not only a better understanding of several fundamental tradeoffs in prefetching strategies, but also important insights on the design of P2P VoD system. On the basis of this analysis, we finally proposed a cooperative prefetching strategy called "cooching". In this strategy, the requested segments in VCR interactivities are prefetched into session beforehand using the information collected through gossips. We evaluate our strategy through extensive simulations. The results indicate that the proposed strategy outperforms the existing prefetching mechanisms.Comment: 13 Pages, IJCN

    Building Internet caching systems for streaming media delivery

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    The proxy has been widely and successfully used to cache the static Web objects fetched by a client so that the subsequent clients requesting the same Web objects can be served directly from the proxy instead of other sources faraway, thus reducing the server\u27s load, the network traffic and the client response time. However, with the dramatic increase of streaming media objects emerging on the Internet, the existing proxy cannot efficiently deliver them due to their large sizes and client real time requirements.;In this dissertation, we design, implement, and evaluate cost-effective and high performance proxy-based Internet caching systems for streaming media delivery. Addressing the conflicting performance objectives for streaming media delivery, we first propose an efficient segment-based streaming media proxy system model. This model has guided us to design a practical streaming proxy, called Hyper-Proxy, aiming at delivering the streaming media data to clients with minimum playback jitter and a small startup latency, while achieving high caching performance. Second, we have implemented Hyper-Proxy by leveraging the existing Internet infrastructure. Hyper-Proxy enables the streaming service on the common Web servers. The evaluation of Hyper-Proxy on the global Internet environment and the local network environment shows it can provide satisfying streaming performance to clients while maintaining a good cache performance. Finally, to further improve the streaming delivery efficiency, we propose a group of the Shared Running Buffers (SRB) based proxy caching techniques to effectively utilize proxy\u27s memory. SRB algorithms can significantly reduce the media server/proxy\u27s load and network traffic and relieve the bottlenecks of the disk bandwidth and the network bandwidth.;The contributions of this dissertation are threefold: (1) we have studied several critical performance trade-offs and provided insights into Internet media content caching and delivery. Our understanding further leads us to establish an effective streaming system optimization model; (2) we have designed and evaluated several efficient algorithms to support Internet streaming content delivery, including segment caching, segment prefetching, and memory locality exploitation for streaming; (3) having addressed several system challenges, we have successfully implemented a real streaming proxy system and deployed it in a large industrial enterprise

    Closest playback-point first: A new peer selection algorithm for P2P VoD systems

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    Peer-to-peer (P2P) based video-on-demand (VoD) streaming service has been gaining popularity recently. Unlike live streaming, a VoD peer always starts its playback from the beginning of a stored video. The playback-points of different peers, as well as the amount of video contents/pieces they cached, depend on when they join the video session, or their viewing ages. As a result, the upload bandwidth of younger peers tends to be underutilized because older peers are not interested in their cached video pieces. The collaborative piece exchange among peers is undermined due to the unbalanced supply and demand. To address this issue, a playback-point based request peer selection algorithm is proposed in this paper. Specifically, when a peer requests a particular video piece, among the set of potential providers, a request is sent to the peer that has the smallest playback-point difference with itself. We call this request peer selection algorithm closest playback-point first (CPF). With CPF, peers with similar available content can be loosely grouped together for a more balanced collaborative piece exchange. Extensive packet-level simulations show that with CPF, the video playback quality is enhanced and the VoD server load is significantly reduced. © 2011 IEEE.published_or_final_versionThe IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference (GLOBECOM 2011), Houston, TX, USA, 5-9 December 201

    An Effective Peer to Peer Video Sharing Scheme with Social Reciprocity

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    Online video sharing and social networking are self-fertilizing speedily in today’s Internet. Online social network users are flooding more video contents among each other. A fascinating development as it is, the operational challenge in previous video streaming systems persists, i.e., the large server load required for topping of the systems. Exploring the unique advantages of a social networking based video streaming system; it advocate utilizing social reciprocities among peers with social relationships for efficient involvement incentivization and development, so as to enable high quality video streaming with low server cost. Then why only video: because more people prefer watching videos. Videos induce people to stay longer on websites. People remember videos. It achievement social reciprocity with two give-and-take ratios at each peer: (1) peer contribution ratio (PCR), which calculates the reciprocity level between a couple of social friends, and (2) system contribution ratio (SCR), which records the give-and-take level of the user to & from the entire system. It expect efficient Peer to Peer mechanisms for video streaming using the two ratios, where each user optimally chooses which other users to seek relay help from and help in relaying video streams, respectively, based on combined evaluations of their social relationship and historical reciprocity levels. This design helps to gain effective incentives for resource contribution, load balancing among relay peers, and efficient social-aware resource scheduling, security to the videos and high prefetching accuracy. DOI: 10.17762/ijritcc2321-8169.15071

    Strategies of collaboration in multi-channel P2P VoD streaming

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    As compared to live peer-to-peer (P2P) streaming, modern P2P video-on-demand (VoD) systems have brought much larger volumes of videos and more interactive controls to the Internet users. Nevertheless, the larger number of available videos and the flexibility of allowing users to jump back and forth in a video, have led to much fewer numbers of concurrent peers watching at a similar pace, that reduces the chance for collaborative chunk supply among peers and thus significantly increases the server bandwidth cost [1]. Towards the ultimate goal of maximizing peer resource utilization, in this paper, we design effective strategies for both cross-channel and intra-channel collaborations in multi-channel P2P VoD systems, such that individual peer's resources, including download/upload bandwidths and the cache capacity, are effectively utilized to maximize the streaming qualities in all the channels. In particular, each peer actively and strategically determines the supply-and-demand imbalance in different channels, as well as that among different chunks within each video, makes use of its surplus download capacity to fetch chunks with the most need, and then serves those chunks using its idle upload bandwidth, all without impairing its own streaming quality. Our extensive trace-driven simulations show the effectiveness of our strategies in reducing the server cost while guaranteeing high streaming qualities in the entire system, even during extreme scenarios such as unexpected flash crowds. ©2010 IEEE.published_or_final_versionThe IEEE Conference and Exhibition on Global Telecommunications (GLOBECOM 2010), Miami, FL., 6-10 December 2010. In Proceedings of GLOBECOM, 2010, p. 1-

    Quality of experience-centric management of adaptive video streaming services : status and challenges

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    Video streaming applications currently dominate Internet traffic. Particularly, HTTP Adaptive Streaming ( HAS) has emerged as the dominant standard for streaming videos over the best-effort Internet, thanks to its capability of matching the video quality to the available network resources. In HAS, the video client is equipped with a heuristic that dynamically decides the most suitable quality to stream the content, based on information such as the perceived network bandwidth or the video player buffer status. The goal of this heuristic is to optimize the quality as perceived by the user, the so-called Quality of Experience (QoE). Despite the many advantages brought by the adaptive streaming principle, optimizing users' QoE is far from trivial. Current heuristics are still suboptimal when sudden bandwidth drops occur, especially in wireless environments, thus leading to freezes in the video playout, the main factor influencing users' QoE. This issue is aggravated in case of live events, where the player buffer has to be kept as small as possible in order to reduce the playout delay between the user and the live signal. In light of the above, in recent years, several works have been proposed with the aim of extending the classical purely client-based structure of adaptive video streaming, in order to fully optimize users' QoE. In this article, a survey is presented of research works on this topic together with a classification based on where the optimization takes place. This classification goes beyond client-based heuristics to investigate the usage of server-and network-assisted architectures and of new application and transport layer protocols. In addition, we outline the major challenges currently arising in the field of multimedia delivery, which are going to be of extreme relevance in future years

    Supporting Non-Linear and Non-Continuous Media Access in Peer-to-Peer Multimedia Systems

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