A case for end system multicast (keynote address)
Proceedings of the 2000 ACM SIGMETRICS international conference on Measurement and modeling of computer systems
Scalable application layer multicast
Proceedings of the 2002 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Inferring link weights using end-to-end measurements
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet measurment
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
The Bloomier filter: an efficient data structure for static support lookup tables
SODA '04 Proceedings of the fifteenth annual ACM-SIAM symposium on Discrete algorithms
XTreeNet: Scalable Overlay Networks for XML Content Dissemination and Querying (Synopsis)
WCW '05 Proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Web Content Caching and Distribution
Overcast: reliable multicasting with on overlay network
OSDI'00 Proceedings of the 4th conference on Symposium on Operating System Design & Implementation - Volume 4
TERA: topic-based event routing for peer-to-peer architectures
Proceedings of the 2007 inaugural international conference on Distributed event-based systems
SpiderCast: a scalable interest-aware overlay for topic-based pub/sub communication
Proceedings of the 2007 inaugural international conference on Distributed event-based systems
Corona: a high performance publish-subscribe system for the world wide web
NSDI'06 Proceedings of the 3rd conference on Networked Systems Design & Implementation - Volume 3
A data-oriented (and beyond) network architecture
Proceedings of the 2007 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Towards an internet-scale XML dissemination service
VLDB '04 Proceedings of the Thirtieth international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 30
Towards a new generation of information-oriented internetworking architectures
CoNEXT '08 Proceedings of the 2008 ACM CoNEXT Conference
Design considerations for a network of information
CoNEXT '08 Proceedings of the 2008 ACM CoNEXT Conference
Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Emerging networking experiments and technologies
What is Twitter, a social network or a news media?
Proceedings of the 19th international conference on World wide web
On content-centric router design and implications
Proceedings of the Re-Architecting the Internet Workshop
MultiCache: An overlay architecture for information-centric networking
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Coexist: a hybrid approach for content oriented publish/subscribe systems
Proceedings of the second edition of the ICN workshop on Information-centric networking
Coexist: integrating content oriented publish/subscribe systems with ip
Proceedings of the eighth ACM/IEEE symposium on Architectures for networking and communications systems
Reliable publish/subscribe in content-centric networks
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Information-centric networking
On name-based group communication: Challenges, concepts, and transparent deployment
Computer Communications
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Content-Centric Networks (CCN) provide substantial flexibility for users to obtain information without regard to the source of the information or its current location. Publish/subscribe (pub/sub) systems have gained popularity in society to provide the convenience of removing the temporal dependency of the user having to indicate an interest each time he or she wants to receive a particular piece of related information. Currently, on the Internet, such pub/sub systems have been built on top of an IP-based network with the additional responsibility placed on the end-systems and servers to do the work of getting a piece of information to interested recipients. We propose Content-Oriented Pub/Sub System (COPSS) to achieve an efficient pub/sub capability for CCN. COPSS enhances the heretofore inherently pull-based CCN architectures proposed by integrating a push based multicast capability at the content-centric layer. We emulate an application that is particularly emblematic of a pub/sub environment -- Twitter -- but one where subscribers are interested in content (e.g., identified by keywords), rather than tweets from a particular individual. Using trace-driven simulation, we demonstrate that our architecture can achieve a scalable and efficient content centric pub/sub network. The simulator is parameterized using the results of careful micro benchmarking of the open source CCN implementation and of standard IP based forwarding. Our evaluations show that COPSS provides considerable performance improvements in terms of aggregate network load, publisher load and subscriber experience compared to that of a traditional IP infrastructure.