Title :
How well does file size predict wide-area transfer time?
Author :
Sharma, Manish ; Byers, John W.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Boston Univ., MA, USA
Abstract :
In scheduling connections at busy Web servers, it is commonly assumed that transmission duration (or time in system) is directly proportional to the size of the file transferred. For example, a scheduling discipline such as SRPT (shortest remaining processing time) could use this assumption to order connections according to the residual size of the transfer. However, with a diverse client population, network effects such as packet loss, heterogeneous end-to-end bandwidths and latencies render this assumption invalid. In this measurement study, we explore this relationship and investigate the predictive value of file size in determining transfer time. We use the publicly available sanitized cache access logs which are collected on a daily basis as a part of IRCache, the NLANR Web caching project, to explore this relationship for HTTP traffic serviced by the NLANR caches over a weeklong interval. Over this dataset, we first confirm an earlier finding: that for small transfers of up to 30 KB, there is virtually no correlation between file size and transfer time; moreover, transfer times vary over 5 orders of magnitude. For larger files, we find that file size and transfer time are increasingly well correlated as file size increases but we still find that predictions of transfer time from file size alone are not highly accurate. Our findings motivate further investigation of incorporating network-awareness into end-system scheduling disciplines.
Keywords :
Internet; cache storage; file servers; hypermedia; packet switching; wide area networks; 30 KB; HTTP traffic; IRCache; NLANR Web caching project; SRPT; Web servers; admission control; cache access logs; connections scheduling; end-system scheduling disciplines; file size; heterogeneous end-to-end bandwidth; latency; network-awareness; packet loss; scheduling discipline; shortest remaining processing time; transfer time; transmission duration; wide-area transfer time; Admission control; Bandwidth; Computer science; Context modeling; Delay; Marine vehicles; Predictive models; Processor scheduling; Size measurement; Time measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2002. GLOBECOM '02. IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7632-3
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2002.1189014