Osmosis: scalable delivery of real-time streaming media in ad-hoc overlay networks
Bestavros, A.; Shudong Jin
Distributed Computing Systems Workshops, 2003. Proceedings. 23rd International Conference on
Volume , Issue , 19-22 May 2003 Page(s): 214 - 219
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/ICDCSW.2003.1203557
Summary: Ad-hoc overlay networks are increasingly used for sharing static bulk content but their promise for scaling the delivery of on-demand, real-time content is yet to be tapped. In this paper, we show that overlay networks could be used efficiently to distribute popular real-time streaming media on-demand to a large number of clients. We propose and evaluate OSMOSIS a cache-and-relay end-system multicast approach, whereby a client joining a multicast session caches the stream, and if needed, relays that stream to neighboring clients which may join the multicast session at some later time. OSCMOSIS is fully distributed, scalable, and efficient in terms of network link costs. We present analytical and empirical results of our evaluation of OSMOSIS. Our analysis establishes OSMOSIS scalability characteristics under a variety of assumptions. Our simulations are over large, synthetic random networks, power-law degree networks, and small-world networks (all of which could well be representative of ad-hoc overlay topologies, as well as over large real router-level Internet maps.
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