DocumentCode
46443
Title
Expansion Properties of Topology for Networking of Information in Cloud
Author
TalebiFard, Peyman ; Leung, Victor C. M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Volume
25
Issue
11
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov. 2014
Firstpage
2877
Lastpage
2887
Abstract
Toward the progress in the era of globalization and ubiquity of sensors and devices, sharing and dissemination of information dominate todays networks. Content-centric networking, cloud services, and open connectivity form the main ingredients of the future Internet architecture. With the problem of information overload, the networking paradigm of cloud computing can benefit from transitioning to a network of information in which information is the main token of communication instead of physical address. Available methods may not be efficient in exploiting the semantics of information for content dissemination. Considering a content-centric approach, we intend to tackle this problem by using the expander graphs for an enhanced network coding scheme that takes an opportunistic strategy to utilize the spectral characteristics of the network topology to achieve a better solvability and reliability and lowering the processing cost for the entire system. By simulation and analytical evaluation, we compare our proposed method with an epidemic network coding based approach. Our evaluation examines the performance of our clustering method in the presence of different random topology models as well as examining the impact on the network coding technique.
Keywords
cloud computing; graph theory; information dissemination; network coding; pattern clustering; cloud computing; cloud services; clustering method; content dissemination; content-centric networking; enhanced network coding scheme; epidemic network coding based approach; expander graphs; future Internet architecture; information dissemination; information networking; information overload; information sharing; open connectivity; opportunistic strategy; random topology models; topology expansion properties; Encoding; Graph theory; Network coding; Network topology; Reliability; Routing; Topology; Cloud computing; content-centric networking; network coding; networking of information; spectral characteristics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPDS.2013.260
Filename
6627891
Link To Document