A scalable Web cache consistency architecture
Proceedings of the conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communication
On filter effects in web caching hierarchies
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
Difficulties in simulating the internet
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Analysis of web caching architectures: hierarchical and distributed caching
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Bringing the web to the network edge: large caches and satellite distribution
Mobile Networks and Applications
ProWGen: a synthetic workload generation tool for simulation evaluation of web proxy caches
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Performance Study of Satellite-Linked Web Caches and Filtering Policies
NETWORKING '00 Proceedings of the IFIP-TC6 / European Commission International Conference on Broadband Communications, High Performance Networking, and Performance of Communication Networks
Estimating frequency of change
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
Tulip: A New Hash Based Cooperative Web Caching Architecture
The Journal of Supercomputing
Anycasting in connection-oriented computer networks: Models, algorithms and results
International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science - Computational Intelligence in Modern Control Systems
Hierarchy-aware algorithms for CDN proxy placement in the Internet
Computer Communications
Babel: a secure computer is a polyglot
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM Workshop on Cloud computing security workshop
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The Internet has fallen prey to its most successful service, the World Wide Web. The networks do not keep up with the demands incurred by the huge amount of Web surfers. Thus, it takes longer and longer to obtain the information one wants to access via the World Wide Web. Many solutions to the problem of network congestion have been developed in distributed systems research in general and distributed file and database systems in particular. The introduction of caching and replication strategies has proven to help in many situations; therefore, these techniques are also applied to the Web. Although most problems and associated solutions are known, some circumstances are different with the Web, forcing the adaptation of known strategies. This article gives an overview of these differences and currently deployed, developed, and evaluated solutions