STOC '97 Proceedings of the twenty-ninth annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing
On power-law relationships of the Internet topology
Proceedings of the conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communication
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
A scalable content-addressable network
Proceedings of the 2001 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Distributed object location in a dynamic network
Proceedings of the fourteenth annual ACM symposium on Parallel algorithms and architectures
Dynamic Replica Placement for Scalable Content Delivery
IPTPS '01 Revised Papers from the First International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Pastry: Scalable, Decentralized Object Location, and Routing for Large-Scale Peer-to-Peer Systems
Middleware '01 Proceedings of the IFIP/ACM International Conference on Distributed Systems Platforms Heidelberg
Optimization of Performance Gain in Content Distribution Networks with Serve Replicas
SAINT '03 Proceedings of the 2003 Symposium on Applications and the Internet
Percolation Search in Power Law Networks: Making Unstructured Peer-to-Peer Networks Scalable
P2P '04 Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing
Hi-index | 0.00 |
It is difficult to build contents delivery platform over the unstructured P2P network because the traffic generated by P2P clients are unmanageable. By applying percolation theory to propagate newly defined reverse-query messages over the unstructured P2P network, we propose novel contents delivery network architecture built over existing unstructured P2P network. We analyzed our algorithm and examined the validity of our model, that will cover more than 80% of all the clients, with relaying reverse-query messages under probability as low as 10%, being effective to reduce the total traffic generated by query propagation. This architecture can be applicable for quasi-broadcast over the Internet.