• DocumentCode
    44330
  • Title

    Celerity: A Low-Delay Multi-Party Conferencing Solution

  • Author

    Xiangwen Chen ; Minghua Chen ; Baochun Li ; Yao Zhao ; Yunnan Wu ; Jin Li

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Inf. Eng., Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
  • Volume
    31
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Sep-13
  • Firstpage
    155
  • Lastpage
    164
  • Abstract
    In this paper, we revisit the problem of multi-party conferencing from a practical perspective, and to rethink the design space involved in this problem. We believe that an emphasis on low end-to-end delays between any two parties in the conference is a must, and the source sending rate in a session should adapt to bandwidth availability and congestion. We present Celerity, a multi-party conferencing solution specifically designed to achieve our objectives. It is entirely Peer-to-Peer (P2P), and as such eliminating the cost of maintaining centrally administered servers. It is designed to deliver video with low end-to-end delays, at quality levels commensurate with available network resources over arbitrary network topologies where bottlenecks can be anywhere in the network. This is in contrast to commonly assumed P2P scenarios where bandwidth bottlenecks reside only at the edge of the network. The highlight in our design is a distributed and adaptive rate control protocol, that can discover and adapt to arbitrary topologies and network conditions quickly, converging to efficient link rate allocations allowed by the underlying network. In accordance with adaptive link rate control, source video encoding rates are also dynamically controlled to optimize video quality in arbitrary and unpredictable network conditions. We have implemented Celerity in a prototype system, and demonstrate its superior performance over existing solutions in a local experimental testbed and over the Internet.
  • Keywords
    peer-to-peer computing; protocols; teleconferencing; Celerity; Internet; P2P; adaptive link rate control; adaptive rate control protocol; end-to-end delays; low-delay multi-party conferencing; peer-to-peer; source video encoding rates; video quality; Algorithm design and analysis; Bandwidth; Delays; Loss measurement; Network topology; Peer-to-peer computing; Receivers; Peer-to-peer; network coding; utility maximization; video conferencing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8716
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JSAC.2013.SUP.0513014
  • Filename
    6560037