scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Web caching and Zipf-like distributions: evidence and implications

TLDR
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.
Abstract
This paper addresses two unresolved issues about Web caching. The first issue is whether Web requests from a fixed user community are distributed according to Zipf's (1929) law. The second issue relates to a number of studies on the characteristics of Web proxy traces, which have shown that the hit-ratios and temporal locality of the traces exhibit certain asymptotic properties that are uniform across the different sets of the traces. In particular, the question is whether these properties are inherent to Web accesses or whether they are simply an artifact of the traces. An answer to these unresolved issues will facilitate both Web cache resource planning and cache hierarchy design. We show that the answers to the two questions are related. We first investigate the page request distribution seen by Web proxy caches using traces from a variety of sources. We find that the distribution does not follow Zipf's law precisely, but instead follows a Zipf-like distribution with the exponent varying from trace to trace. Furthermore, we find that there is only (i) a weak correlation between the access frequency of a Web page and its size and (ii) a weak correlation between access frequency and its rate of change. We then consider a simple model where the Web accesses are independent and the reference probability of the documents follows a Zipf-like distribution. We find that the model yields asymptotic behaviour that are consistent with the experimental observations, suggesting that the various observed properties of hit-ratios and temporal locality are indeed inherent to Web accesses observed by proxies. Finally, we revisit Web cache replacement algorithms and show that the algorithm that is suggested by this simple model performs best on real trace data. The results indicate that while page requests do indeed reveal short-term correlations and other structures, a simple model for an independent request stream following a Zipf-like distribution is sufficient to capture certain asymptotic properties observed at Web proxies.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

High-Throughput Opportunistic Cooperative Device-to-Device Communications With Caching

TL;DR: In this paper, an opportunistic cooperation strategy for D2D transmission by exploiting the caching capability at the users to control the interference among D2DM links is proposed, and the closed-form expression of the bandwidth allocation factor is obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power Law Distributions in Information Retrieval

TL;DR: It is found that query frequency and 5 out of 24 term frequency distributions are best approximated by a power law and all remaining properties are better approximating by the Inverse Gaussian, Generalized Extreme Value, Negative Binomial, or Yule distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-performance benchmarking with web polygraph

TL;DR: The design and implementation of Web Polygraph is presented, a tool for benchmarking HTTP intermediaries and its simulation models may be useful for Web proxy developers, performance analysts, and researchers interested in Web traffic simulation.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Decentralized Caching for Content Delivery Based on Blockchain: A Game Theoretic Perspective

TL;DR: This paper employs the blockchain-based smart contracts to construct an autonomous content caching market, and proposes a decentralized strategy-searching algorithm using sequential best response that demonstrates both the efficiency and reliability of the proposed equilibrium searching algorithm.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Optimizing Peer Relationships in a Super-Peer Network

TL;DR: A self-organizing super-peer network architecture (SOSPNET) that achieves close-to-optimal file search performance, quickly adjusts to changes in the environment, survives even catastrophic node failures, and efficiently distributes the system load taking into account peer capacities is introduced.
References
More filters
Proceedings Article

Cost-aware WWW proxy caching algorithms

TL;DR: GreedyDual-Size as discussed by the authors incorporates locality with cost and size concerns in a simple and nonparameterized fashion for high performance, which can potentially improve the performance of main-memory caching of Web documents.
Book

Operating Systems Theory

TL;DR: As one of the part of book categories, operating systems theory always becomes the most wanted book.

Characteristics of WWW Client-based Traces

TL;DR: This paper presents a descriptive statistical summary of the traces of actual executions of NCSA Mosaic, and shows that many characteristics of WWW use can be modelled using power-law distributions, including the distribution of document sizes, the popularity of documents as a function of size, and the Distribution of user requests for documents.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Characterizing reference locality in the WWW

TL;DR: The authors propose models for both temporal and spatial locality of reference in streams of requests arriving at Web servers and show that temporal locality can be characterized by the marginal distribution of the stack distance trace, and proposed models for typical distributions and compare their cache performance to the traces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Working Sets Past and Present

TL;DR: This paper outlines the argument why it is unlikely that anyone will find a cheaper nonlookahead memory policy that delivers significantly better performance and suggests that a working set dispatcher should be considered.
Related Papers (5)