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Journal ArticleDOI

The cache location problem

P. Krishnan, +2 more
- 01 Oct 2000 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 5, pp 568-582
TLDR
There is a surprising consistency over time in the relative amount of web traffic from the server along a path, lending a stability to the TERC location solution and these techniques can be used by network providers to reduce traffic load in their network.
Abstract
This paper studies the problem of where to place network caches. Emphasis is given to caches that are transparent to the clients since they are easier to manage and they require no cooperation from the clients. Our goal is to minimize the overall flow or the average delay by placing a given number of caches in the network. We formulate these location problems both for general caches and for transparent en-route caches (TERCs), and identify that, in general, they are intractable. We give optimal algorithms for line and ring networks, and present closed form formulae for some special cases. We also present a computationally efficient dynamic programming algorithm for the single server case. This last case is of particular practical interest. It models a network that wishes to minimize the average access delay for a single web server. We experimentally study the effects of our algorithm using real web server data. We observe that a small number of TERCs are sufficient to reduce the network traffic significantly. Furthermore, there is a surprising consistency over time in the relative amount of web traffic from the server along a path, lending a stability to our TERC location solution. Our techniques can be used by network providers to reduce traffic load in their network.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pushing CDN-ISP collaboration to the limit

TL;DR: This paper revisits the design and operating space of CDN-ISP collaboration in light of recent ISP and CDN alliances, and identifies two key enablers for supporting collaboration and improving content delivery performance: informed end-user to server assignment and in-network server allocation.
Book

Performance Analysis of Complex Networks and Systems

TL;DR: The hopcount and weight to an anycast group Appendix A. A summary of matrix theory Appendix B. The efficiency of multicast 19. The shortest path problem as mentioned in this paper and its solutions to problems.

Measuring and Evaluating Large-Scale CDNs

TL;DR: Detailed and thorough measurements that accurately characterize the performance of two large-scale commercial CDNs are conducted, shedding light on two radically different design philosophies for CDNs: the Akamai design, whichenters deep into ISPs; and the Limelight design, which brings ISPs to home.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Hash-routing schemes for information centric networking

TL;DR: This paper designs five different hash-routing schemes which efficiently exploit in-network caches without requiring network routers to maintain per-content state information and shows that such schemes can increase cache hits by up to 31% in comparison to on-path caching, with minimal impact on the traffic dynamics of intra-domain links.
Journal ArticleDOI

QoS-aware replica placement for content distribution

TL;DR: It is shown that there exist polynomial optimal solutions to the QoS-aware placement problem for replica-blind services, and several heuristic algorithms for fast computation of good solutions are proposed and experimentally evaluated.
References
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Book

Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness

TL;DR: The second edition of a quarterly column as discussed by the authors provides a continuing update to the list of problems (NP-complete and harder) presented by M. R. Garey and myself in our book "Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness,” W. H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco, 1979.
Proceedings Article

Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1

TL;DR: The Hypertext Transfer Protocol is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems, which can be used for many tasks beyond its use for hypertext through extension of its request methods, error codes and headers.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Web caching and Zipf-like distributions: evidence and implications

TL;DR: This paper investigates the page request distribution seen by Web proxy caches using traces from a variety of sources and considers a simple model where the Web accesses are independent and the reference probability of the documents follows a Zipf-like distribution, suggesting that the various observed properties of hit-ratios and temporal locality are indeed inherent to Web accesse observed by proxies.
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