To assess the performance of caching systems, the definition of a proper
process describing the content requests generated by users is required.
Starting from the analysis of traces of YouTube video requests collected inside
operational networks, we identify the characteristics of real traffic that need
to be represented and those that instead can be safely neglected. Based on our
observations, we introduce a simple, parsimonious traffic model, named Shot
Noise Model (SNM), that allows us to capture temporal and geographical locality
of content popularity. The SNM is sufficiently simple to be effectively
employed in both analytical and scalable simulative studies of caching systems.
We demonstrate this by analytically characterizing the performance of the LRU
caching policy under the SNM, for both a single cache and a network of caches.
With respect to the standard Independent Reference Model (IRM), some
paradigmatic shifts, concerning the impact of various traffic characteristics
on cache performance, clearly emerge from our results.Comment: 14 pages, 11 Figures, 2 Appendice