DocumentCode
2278497
Title
A resource-trading mechanism for efficient distribution of large-volume contents on peer-to-peer networks
Author
Koo, Simon G M ; Lee, C. S George ; Kannan, Karthik
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
17-19 Oct. 2005
Firstpage
428
Lastpage
433
Abstract
In recent years, the rapid growth of peer-to-peer (P2P) networks has provided a new paradigm for content distribution. To improve the efficiency of a P2P system, it is important to provide incentives for the peers to participate and contribute their resources. Various attempts have been made to reward/penalize peers by providing service differentiation based on a requesting peer\´s history or reputation. However, in a truly distributed, non-cooperative environment, maintaining and preventing the untruthful revealing of such information within the community impose larger computation and communication overheads to the system. These problems are further magnified when large-volume contents are being distributed because of the length distribution processes and the update of history or reputation has to keep up with the distribution process. In this paper, we address the incentive provisioning problem for distribution of large-volume content in P2P networks, and present a "seeing-is-believing" incentive-compatible mechanism (protocol) in which a peer will decide how much resources will be assigned to which neighbors based on what it has experienced. The protocol applies a utility-based resource-trading concept where peers will maximize their contributions for a fair or better return, and we show that by adopting this protocol, the system will achieve Cournot Equilibrium. Furthermore, our protocol is light-weight, completely decentralized, and cheat-proof. Experimental results illustrate significant improvements on the distribution efficiency of our protocol over other adopted alternatives.
Keywords
DiffServ networks; content management; peer-to-peer computing; protocols; resource allocation; Cournot equilibrium; P2P network protocol; communication overhead; content distribution network; distributed noncooperative environment; incentive provisioning problem; incentive-compatible mechanism; large-volume CDN; peer-to-peer network; resource-trading mechanism; service differentiation; utility-based concept;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Communications and Networks, 2005. ICCCN 2005. Proceedings. 14th International Conference on
ISSN
1095-2055
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9428-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCCN.2005.1523902
Filename
1523902
Link To Document