Title :
Distributed File Structures in a Peer-to-Peer Environment
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Informatics, Edinburgh Univ., UK
Abstract :
As computing becomes increasingly distributed, the need for accessing and manipulating distributed data becomes prominent. The focus so far has been on developing fault-tolerant, load-balanced and scalable techniques for distributing data across the network without placing much importance on the semantics of the applications built on top of them - much in the way a centralized file system simply serves disk pages without handling their semantics. In this paper, we continue this "black-box" approach and extend it to the next level. We take standard file structures and distribute them across a peer-to-peer network and test their performance. We then identify performance bottlenecks and propose ways of overcoming them. These results, we believe, exhibit the potential of seamlessly extending computing applications assuming standard (centralized) file I/O capabilities to work in distributed environments.
Keywords :
data structures; peer-to-peer computing; resource allocation; software performance evaluation; black-box approach; centralized file system; distributed data; distributed file structures; fault-tolerant load-balanced scalable technique; peer-to-peer environment; peer-to-peer network; performance testing; Buildings; Computer applications; Computer networks; Data structures; Dictionaries; Distributed computing; File systems; Informatics; Peer to peer computing; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Data Engineering, 2007. ICDE 2007. IEEE 23rd International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Istanbul
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0802-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICDE.2007.367886