Data management for mobile computing
ACM SIGMOD Record
Sleepers and workaholics: caching strategies in mobile environments
SIGMOD '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Data replication for mobile computers
SIGMOD '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Adaptive web caching: towards a new global caching architecture
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems - Selected papers of the 3rd international caching workshop
Not all hits are created equal: cooperative proxy caching over a wide-area network
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems - Selected papers of the 3rd international caching workshop
Parallel Computer Architecture: A Hardware/Software Approach
Parallel Computer Architecture: A Hardware/Software Approach
Object Allocation in Distributed Databases and Mobile Computers
Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Data Engineering
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle: An Approach to Building Large Internet Caches
HOTOS '97 Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems (HotOS-VI)
Maintaining Strong Cache Consistency in the World-Wide Web
ICDCS '97 Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS '97)
Proxy Cache Coherency and Replacement - Towards a More Complete Picture
ICDCS '99 Proceedings of the 19th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
Design Considerations for Distributed Caching on the Internet
Design Considerations for Distributed Caching on the Internet
A Quality of Service (QoS) Implementation of Internet Cache Coherence
AINA '04 Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications - Volume 2
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Caching has long been employed in computer systems to improve performance at the expense of additional complexity in memory organisation and management. The coherence schemes developed for traditional large-scale systems (CC-NUMA) fail when applied to the vastness of today's mobile internet. A quality of service (QoS) approach is ideally suited for a general-purpose internet cache coherence protocol, providing strong consistency when needed while permitting weaker consistency for less critical data. An inexpensive, QOS solution to internet cache coherence is presented, and an experimental framework is outlined to verify the potential of the proposed scheme as a viable coherence solution for general internet applications.