Title :
Optimal distributed P2P streaming under node degree bounds
Author :
Zhang, Shaoquan ; Shao, Ziyu ; Chen, Minghua
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Eng., Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
Abstract :
We study the problem of maximizing the broadcast rate in peer-to-peer (P2P) systems under node degree bounds, i.e., the number of neighbors a node can simultaneously connect to is upper-bounded. The problem is critical for supporting high-quality video streaming in P2P systems, and is challenging due to its combinatorial nature. In this paper, we address this problem by providing the first distributed solution that achieves near-optimal broadcast rate under arbitrary node degree bounds, and over arbitrary overlay graph. It runs on individual nodes and utilizes only the measurement from their one-hop neighbors, making the solution easy to implement and adaptable to peer churn and network dynamics. Our solution consists of two distributed algorithms proposed in this paper that can be of independent interests: a network-coding based broadcasting algorithm that optimizes the broadcast rate given a topology, and a Markov-chain guided topology hopping algorithm that optimizes the topology. Our distributed broadcasting algorithm achieves the optimal broadcast rate over arbitrary P2P topology, while previously proposed distributed algorithms obtain optimality only for P2P complete graphs. We prove the optimality of our solution and its convergence to a neighborhood around the optimal equilibrium under noisy measurements or without timescale separation assumptions. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our solution in simulations using uplink bandwidth statistics of Internet hosts.
Keywords :
Internet; Markov processes; network coding; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication network topology; video streaming; Internet hosts; Markov chain guided topology hopping algorithm; arbitrary overlay graph; distributed peer-to-peer streaming; near-optimal broadcast rate; network dynamics; network-coding based broadcasting algorithm; node degree bounds; peer churn; timescale separation; uplink bandwidth statistics; video streaming; Algorithm design and analysis; Approximation methods; Broadcasting; Heuristic algorithms; Markov processes; Network coding; Peer to peer computing;
Conference_Titel :
Network Protocols (ICNP), 2010 18th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Kyoto
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8644-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICNP.2010.5762774