Title :
A Measurement Study of Piece Population in BitTorrent
Author :
Dale, Cameron ; Liu, Jiangchuan
Author_Institution :
Simon Fraser Univ., Burnaby
Abstract :
BitTorrent is the most popular peer-to-peer software for file sharing, which has contributed to a significant portion of today´s Internet traffic. Many measurement studies have been devoted to the BitTorrent system at the peer-level; yet few have examined the microscopic piece-level, in particular, the piece populations. This information is very useful in understanding the dynamics and evolution of BitTorrent swarms, and especially the effectiveness of its rarest-first policy that strives to ensure an even distribution of pieces. In this paper, we present a systematic measurement study on the distribution and evolution of the piece population in BitTorrent. Our measurement is based on real BitTorrent data gathered from both the Internet and controlled PlanetLab swarms. The data is collected by multiple administrated clients distributed in different parts of the network, which collectively offer a global view of the piece distribution. We analyze both snapshot data of the near-instantaneous population of pieces in BitTorrent swarms, and long-term data of the evolution of the piece population over several days, especially during the early phases of the swarm´s lifetime. Our results validate that the downloading policy of BitTorrent is quite effective from a piece distribution and evolution perspective; yet enhancements are still possible to achieve the ideal piece distribution.
Keywords :
Internet; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication traffic; BitTorrent swarms; Internet traffic; PlanetLab swarms; downloading policy; file sharing; peer-to-peer software; piece population; rarest-first policy; systematic measurement study; Data analysis; Extraterrestrial measurements; Information analysis; Internet; Microscopy; Numerical models; Particle measurements; Peer to peer computing; Software measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2007. GLOBECOM '07. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1042-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1043-9
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2007.82