DocumentCode
3346080
Title
Stable Peers: Existence, Importance, and Application in Peer-to-Peer Live Video Streaming
Author
Feng Wang ; Jiangchuan Liu ; Yongqiang Xiong
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Simon Fraser Univ., Burnaby, BC
fYear
2008
fDate
13-18 April 2008
Abstract
This paper presents a systematic in-depth study on the existence, importance, and application of stable nodes in peer- to-peer live video streaming. Using traces from a real large-scale system as well as analytical models, we show that, while the number of stable nodes is small throughout a whole session, their longer lifespans make them constitute a significant portion in a per-snapshot view of a peer-to-peer overlay. As a result, they have substantially affected the performance of the overall system. Inspired by this, we propose a tiered overlay design, with stable nodes being organized into a tier-1 backbone for serving tier-2 nodes. It offers a highly cost-effective and deployable alternative to proxy-assisted designs. We develop a comprehensive set of algorithms for stable node identification and organization. Specifically, we present a novel structure, Labeled Tree, for the tier-1 overlay, which, leveraging stable peers, simultaneously achieves low overhead and high transmission reliability. Our tiered framework flexibly accommodates diverse existing overlay structures in the second tier. Our extensive simulation results demonstrated that the customized optimization using selected stable nodes boosts the streaming quality and also effectively reduces the control overhead. This is further validated through prototype experiments over the PlanetLab network.
Keywords
peer-to-peer computing; trees (mathematics); video streaming; labeled tree structure; overlay network; peer-to-peer live video streaming; stable node identification; Analytical models; Asia; Bandwidth; Communications Society; Delay; Large-scale systems; Peer to peer computing; Prototypes; Spine; Streaming media;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM 2008. The 27th Conference on Computer Communications. IEEE
Conference_Location
Phoenix, AZ
ISSN
0743-166X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2025-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFOCOM.2008.194
Filename
4509789
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