DocumentCode
2311663
Title
Distributed File Sharing: Network Coding Meets Compressed Sensing
Author
Chen, Huimin
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., New Orleans Univ., LA
fYear
2006
fDate
25-27 Oct. 2006
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
In a peer-to-peer file distribution network, a large file is split into blocks residing in multiple storage locations. A peer node tries to retrieve the original file by downloading blocks from randomly chosen peers. We compare the performance of four storage strategies: uncoded, erasure coding, random linear coding, and random linear coding over coded blocks. We show that, in principle, random linear coding makes a better tradeoff between the storage requirement and decoding complexity. However, the sparsity of the file blocks is not fully exploited by random linear combinations of all original blocks. Motivated by the recent results from compressed sensing, we study the design tradeoff in random linear coding over coded blocks and propose an efficient decoding algorithm based on basis pursuit. We show that the minimum number of storage locations that a peer note has to connect to reconstruct the entire file with high probability can be significantly smaller than the total number of blocks that the file is broken into
Keywords
block codes; decoding; linear codes; peer-to-peer computing; random codes; coded blocks; compressed sensing; decoding complexity; distributed file sharing; erasure coding; network coding; peer-to-peer file distribution network; random linear coding; randomly chosen peers; Algorithm design and analysis; Compressed sensing; Decoding; File servers; IP networks; Network coding; Network servers; Peer to peer computing; Pursuit algorithms; Web server;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications and Networking in China, 2006. ChinaCom '06. First International Conference on
Conference_Location
Beijing
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0463-0
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0463-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CHINACOM.2006.344708
Filename
4149711
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