DocumentCode
395866
Title
Analysis of parallel downloading for large file distribution
Author
Koo, Simon G M ; Rosenberg, Catherine ; Xu, Dongyan
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
28-30 May 2003
Firstpage
128
Lastpage
135
Abstract
Recently, the scheme of parallel downloading (PD) has been adopted by a number of Internet file downloading applications. With the wide deployment of content distribution networks and peer-to-peer networks, PD is expected to be more commonly used for file distribution. There have been experiments showing that PD results in higher aggregated downloading throughput and therefore shorter downloading time experienced by clients. However, these experimental studies focused on the performance experienced by a particular user and did not consider the impact of PD on the network when it is largely deployed. In this paper we present our efforts toward an in-depth understanding of large-scale deployment of PD through simulation and analysis. Our results suggest that while PD may achieve a shorter downloading time, its impact on the network and server is significant. Our analysis is also used for network dimensioning and content distribution service provisioning. We show that with proper admission control and dimensioning, single-server downloading can perform just as well as PD, without the complexity and overhead incurred by PD.
Keywords
Internet; file servers; network operating systems; parallel processing; Internet file downloading applications; admission control; content distribution networks; large file distribution; network dimensioning; parallel downloading; peer-to-peer networks; single-server downloading; Analytical models; Application software; Computer science; Concurrent computing; Intelligent networks; Internet; Network servers; Peer to peer computing; Throughput; Tornadoes;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Distributed Computing Systems, 2003. FTDCS 2003. Proceedings. The Ninth IEEE Workshop on Future Trends of
ISSN
1071-0485
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1910-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FTDCS.2003.1204324
Filename
1204324
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