11,896 research outputs found
Optimally Efficient Prefix Search and Multicast in Structured P2P Networks
Searching in P2P networks is fundamental to all overlay networks.
P2P networks based on Distributed Hash Tables (DHT) are optimized for single
key lookups, whereas unstructured networks offer more complex queries at the
cost of increased traffic and uncertain success rates. Our Distributed Tree
Construction (DTC) approach enables structured P2P networks to perform prefix
search, range queries, and multicast in an optimal way. It achieves this by
creating a spanning tree over the peers in the search area, using only
information available locally on each peer. Because DTC creates a spanning
tree, it can query all the peers in the search area with a minimal number of
messages. Furthermore, we show that the tree depth has the same upper bound as
a regular DHT lookup which in turn guarantees fast and responsive runtime
behavior. By placing objects with a region quadtree, we can perform a prefix
search or a range query in a freely selectable area of the DHT. Our DTC
algorithm is DHT-agnostic and works with most existing DHTs. We evaluate the
performance of DTC over several DHTs by comparing the performance to existing
application-level multicast solutions, we show that DTC sends 30-250% fewer
messages than common solutions
The essence of P2P: A reference architecture for overlay networks
The success of the P2P idea has created a huge diversity
of approaches, among which overlay networks, for example,
Gnutella, Kazaa, Chord, Pastry, Tapestry, P-Grid, or DKS,
have received specific attention from both developers and
researchers. A wide variety of algorithms, data structures,
and architectures have been proposed. The terminologies
and abstractions used, however, have become quite inconsistent since the P2P paradigm has attracted people from many different communities, e.g., networking, databases, distributed systems, graph theory, complexity theory, biology, etc. In this paper we propose a reference model for overlay networks which is capable of modeling different approaches in this domain in a generic manner. It is intended to allow researchers and users to assess the properties of concrete systems, to establish a common vocabulary for scientific discussion, to facilitate the qualitative comparison of the systems, and to serve as the basis for defining a standardized API to make overlay networks interoperable
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