• DocumentCode
    3246902
  • Title

    Scalable Local Area Service Discovery

  • Author

    Black, Richard ; Sverrisson, H. ; Massoulie, Laurent

  • Author_Institution
    Microsoft Res., Redmond
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    24-28 June 2007
  • Firstpage
    2050
  • Lastpage
    2057
  • Abstract
    Existing methods for local area service discovery either don\´t scale or rely on a trustworthy directory server; in some environments these restrictions are unacceptable or impractical. This paper describes "Repeat-BAND", a generic method for service discovery that scales automatically without depending on any central component. The automatic scaling makes it fast on small networks and automatically load controlled on large networks, irrespective of the number of simultaneous discoveries taking place. It is generic in the sense that the automatic scaling technique can be applied to improve any particular service discovery system, and it is applicable across a large variety of types of network because we show how all the tuning parameters are derived. We present results showing controlled load discovery with scalability up to very large networks. We also show that the algorithms are simple and easy to implement; an important practical requirement since the method is used in Windows Vista and licensed by many hardware vendors. In addition, we consider the industrial requirement as to the certification of independent implementations, an aspect normally ignored in the academic literature.
  • Keywords
    local area networks; LAN; Repeat-BAND; Windows Vista; automatic scaling technique; local area network; networks scalability; scalable local area service discovery; trustworthy directory server; tuning parameters; Automatic control; Bandwidth; Costs; Ethernet networks; Local area networks; Network servers; Peer to peer computing; Scalability; Switches; Unicast;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Communications, 2007. ICC '07. IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Glasgow
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0353-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICC.2007.340
  • Filename
    4289011