Chord: A scalable peer-to-peer lookup service for internet applications
Proceedings of the 2001 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
SOSP '03 Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
Awarded Best Student Paper! - Pond: The OceanStore Prototype
FAST '03 Proceedings of the 2nd USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies
BitVault: a highly reliable distributed data retention platform
ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review - Systems work at Microsoft Research
Ceph: a scalable, high-performance distributed file system
OSDI '06 Proceedings of the 7th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation - Volume 7
Can ISPS and P2P users cooperate for improved performance?
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
Dynamo: amazon's highly available key-value store
Proceedings of twenty-first ACM SIGOPS symposium on Operating systems principles
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The Peer-to-Peer (P2P) technology being widely adopted in today's both academic research and practical service providing, has many potential advantages and achieves a great success in Information Technology scope. Recently some researchers have proposed that P2P inspired architecture also might be one choice for the telecom network evolution. Most of such works adopted structured P2P (DHT) as the basic solutions, but they seldom discussed how to eliminate the huge gap between the telecom underlay performance requirement and the performance of existed DHT which mainly originated from the Internet applications. This paper presents the design and implementation of SandStone, a DHT based key-value storage system with carrier grade performance, such as good scalability, strong consistency and high reliability, which could be deployed as the cornerstone in such new P2P inspired networking architectures.