157 research outputs found

    Analytical Investigation of On-Path Caching Performance in Information Centric Networks

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    Information Centric Networking (ICN) architectures are proposed as a solution to address the shift from host-centric model toward an information centric model in the Internet. In these architectures, routing nodes have caching functionality that can influence the network traffic and communication quality since the data items can be sent from nodes far closer to the requesting users. Therefore, realizing effective caching networks becomes important to grasp the cache characteristics of each node and to manage system resources, taking into account networking metrics (e.g., higher hit ratio) as well as user’s metrics (e.g. shorter delay). This thesis studies the methodologies for improving the performance of cache management in ICNs. As individual sub-problems, this thesis investigates the LRU-2 and 2-LRU algorithms, geographical locality in distribution of users’ requests and efficient caching in ICNs. As the first contribution of this thesis, a mathematical model to approximate the behaviour of the LRU-2 algorithm is proposed. Then, 2-LRU and LRU-2 cache replacement algorithms are analyzed. The 2-LRU caching strategy has been shown to outperform LRU. The main idea behind 2-LRU and LRU-2 is considering both frequency (i.e. metric used in LFU) and recency (i.e. metric used in LRU) together for cache replacement process. The simulation as well as numeric results show that the proposed LRU-2 model precisely approximates the miss rate for LRU-2 algorithm. Next, the influence of geographical locality in users’ requests on the performance of network of caches is investigated. Geographically localized and global request patterns have both been observed to possess Zipf (i.e. a power-law distribution in which few data items have high request frequencies while most of data items have low request frequencies) properties, although the local distributions are poorly correlated with the global distribution. This suggests that several independent Zipf distributions combine to form an emergent Zipf distribution in real client request scenarios. An algorithm is proposed that can generate realistic synthetic traffic to regional caches that possesses Zipf properties as well as produces a global Zipf distribution. The simulation results show that the caching performance could have different behaviour based on what distribution the users’ requests follow. Finally, the efficiency of cache replacement and replication algorithms in ICNs are studied since ICN literature still lacks an empirical and analytical deep understanding of benefits brought by in-network caching. An analytical model is proposed that optimally distributes a total cache budget among the nodes of ICN networks for LRU cache replacement and LCE cache replication algorithms. The results will show how much user-centric and system-centric benefits could be gained through the in-network caching compared to the benefits obtained through caching facilities provided only at the edge of the network

    Cost-aware caching: optimizing cache provisioning and object placement in ICN

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    Caching is frequently used by Internet Service Providers as a viable technique to reduce the latency perceived by end users, while jointly offloading network traffic. While the cache hit-ratio is generally considered in the literature as the dominant performance metric for such type of systems, in this paper we argue that a critical missing piece has so far been neglected. Adopting a radically different perspective, in this paper we explicitly account for the cost of content retrieval, i.e. the cost associated to the external bandwidth needed by an ISP to retrieve the contents requested by its customers. Interestingly, we discover that classical cache provisioning techniques that maximize cache efficiency (i.e., the hit-ratio), lead to suboptimal solutions with higher overall cost. To show this mismatch, we propose two optimization models that either minimize the overall costs or maximize the hit-ratio, jointly providing cache sizing, object placement and path selection. We formulate a polynomial-time greedy algorithm to solve the two problems and analytically prove its optimality. We provide numerical results and show that significant cost savings are attainable via a cost-aware design

    Performance Analysis and Optimisation of In-network Caching for Information-Centric Future Internet

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    The rapid development in wireless technologies and multimedia services has radically shifted the major function of the current Internet from host-centric communication to service-oriented content dissemination, resulting a mismatch between the protocol design and the current usage patterns. Motivated by this significant change, Information-Centric Networking (ICN), which has been attracting ever-increasing attention from the communication networks research community, has emerged as a new clean-slate networking paradigm for future Internet. Through identifying and routing data by unified names, ICN aims at providing natural support for efficient information retrieval over the Internet. As a crucial characteristic of ICN, in-network caching enables users to efficiently access popular contents from on-path routers equipped with ubiquitous caches, leading to the enhancement of the service quality and reduction of network loads. Performance analysis and optimisation has been and continues to be key research interests of ICN. This thesis focuses on the development of efficient and accurate analytical models for the performance evaluation of ICN caching and the design of optimal caching management schemes under practical network configurations. This research starts with the proposition of a new analytical model for caching performance under the bursty multimedia traffic. The bursty characteristic is captured and the closed formulas for cache hit ratio are derived. To investigate the impact of topology and heterogeneous caching parameters on the performance, a comprehensive analytical model is developed to gain valuable insight into the caching performance with heterogeneous cache sizes, service intensity and content distribution under arbitrary topology. The accuracy of the proposed models is validated by comparing the analytical results with those obtained from extensive simulation experiments. The analytical models are then used as cost-efficient tools to investigate the key network and content parameters on the performance of caching in ICN. Bursty traffic and heterogeneous caching features have significant influence on the performance of ICN. Therefore, in order to obtain optimal performance results, a caching resource allocation scheme, which leverages the proposed model and targets at minimising the total traffic within the network and improving hit probability at the nodes, is proposed. The performance results reveal that the caching allocation scheme can achieve better caching performance and network resource utilisation than the default homogeneous and random caching allocation strategy. To attain a thorough understanding of the trade-off between the economic aspect and service quality, a cost-aware Quality-of-Service (QoS) optimisation caching mechanism is further designed aiming for cost-efficiency and QoS guarantee in ICN. A cost model is proposed to take into account installation and operation cost of ICN under a realistic ISP network scenario, and a QoS model is presented to formulate the service delay and delay jitter in the presence of heterogeneous service requirements and general probabilistic caching strategy. Numerical results show the effectiveness of the proposed mechanism in achieving better service quality and lower network cost. In this thesis, the proposed analytical models are used to efficiently and accurately evaluate the performance of ICN and investigate the key performance metrics. Leveraging the insights discovered by the analytical models, the proposed caching management schemes are able to optimise and enhance the performance of ICN. To widen the outcomes achieved in the thesis, several interesting yet challenging research directions are pointed out

    Study and analysis of mobility, security, and caching issues in CCN

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    Existing architecture of Internet is IP-centric, having capability to cope with the needs of the Internet users. Due to the recent advancements and emerging technologies, a need to have ubiquitous connectivity has become the primary focus. Increasing demands for location-independent content raised the requirement of a new architecture and hence it became a research challenge. Content Centric Networking (CCN) paradigm emerges as an alternative to IP-centric model and is based on name-based forwarding and in-network data caching. It is likely to address certain challenges that have not been solved by IP-based protocols in wireless networks. Three important factors that require significant research related to CCN are mobility, security, and caching. While a number of studies have been conducted on CCN and its proposed technologies, none of the studies target all three significant research directions in a single article, to the best of our knowledge. This paper is an attempt to discuss the three factors together within context of each other. In this paper, we discuss and analyze basics of CCN principles with distributed properties of caching, mobility, and secure access control. Different comparisons are made to examine the strengths and weaknesses of each aforementioned aspect in detail. The final discussion aims to identify the open research challenges and some future trends for CCN deployment on a large scale

    A native content discovery mechanism for the information-centric networks

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    Recent research has considered various approaches for discovering content in the cache-enabled nodes of an Autonomous System (AS) to reduce the costly inter-AS traffic. Such approaches include i) searching content opportunistically (on-path) along the default intra-AS path towards the content origin for limited gain, and ii) actively coordinate nodes when caching content for significantly higher gains, but also higher overhead. In this paper, we try to combine the merits of both worlds by using traditional opportunistic caching mechanisms enhanced with a lightweight content discovery approach. Particularly, a content retrieved through an inter-AS link is cached only once along the intra-AS delivery path to maximize network storage utilization, and ephemeral forwarding state to locate temporarily stored content is established opportunistically at each node along that path during the processing of Data packets. The ephemeral forwarding state either points to the arriving or the destination face of the Data packet depending on whether the content has already been cached along the path or not. The challenge in such an approach is to appropriately use and maintain the ephemeral forwarding state to minimize inter-AS content retrieval, while keeping retrieval latency and overhead at acceptable levels. We propose several forwarding strategies to use and manage ephemeral state and evaluate our mechanism using an ISP topology for various system parameters. Our results indicate that our opportunistic content discovery mechanism can achieve near-optimal performance and significantly reduce inter-AS traffic

    Design and Evaluation of the Optimal Cache Allocation for Content-Centric Networking

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    Content-centric networking (CCN) is a promising framework to rebuild the Internet's forwarding substrate around the concept of content. CCN advocates ubiquitous in-network caching to enhance content delivery, and thus each router has storage space to cache frequently requested content. In this work, we focus on the cache allocation problem, namely, how to distribute the cache capacity across routers under a constrained total storage budget for the network. We first formulate this problem as a content placement problem and obtain the optimal solution by a two-step method. We then propose a suboptimal heuristic method based on node centrality, which is more practical in dynamic networks with frequent content publishing. We investigate through simulations the factors that affect the optimal cache allocation, and perhaps more importantly we use a real-life Internet topology and video access logs from a large scale Internet video provider to evaluate the performance of various cache allocation methods. We observe that network topology and content popularity are two important factors that affect where exactly should cache capacity be placed. Further, the heuristic method comes with only a very limited performance penalty compared to the optimal allocation. Finally, using our findings, we provide recommendations for network operators on the best deployment of CCN caches capacity over routers

    Optimal Cache Allocation for Content-Centric Networking

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    This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program of China with Grant 2012CB315801, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) with Grants 61133015 and 61272473, the National High-tech R&D Program of China with Grant 2013AA013501, and by the Strategic Priority Research Program of CAS with Grant X-DA06010303. The work was also supported by the EC EINS and EPSRC IU-ATC projects
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