Title :
Understanding and Supporting Live and On-Demand Streaming Service
Author :
Tang, Yun ; Meng, Qian ; Zhang, Kaiyun ; Yang, Shiqiang
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Public Policy & Manage., Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
fDate :
March 31 2009-April 2 2009
Abstract :
Despite the popularity of streaming applications over Internet, little is known about its practical properties which could be potentially exploited to guide the system design of next generation peer-to-peer (P2P) networks. In this paper, we hence investigate the problem of understanding and supporting the two types of dominant streaming services - live broadcasting and on-demand streaming - with high service availability and system scalability. We make a measurement study to traditional but popular client/server (C/S) systems to reveal many fundamental and interesting observations with the benefit of totally more than 30,000,000 real workload traces. The anatomy particularly focuses on request and popularity issues which play a vital role to the system performance and also characterize evolutional user behaviors in the service community. The inherent request characteristics in live broadcasting service and drawbacks of classical cache-and-relay (CR) scheme in on-demand streaming further motivate us to discuss essential challenges and open questions in the context of supporting the two services over P2P networks.
Keywords :
broadcasting; client-server systems; media streaming; peer-to-peer computing; Internet; P2P networks; cache-and-relay scheme; client-server systems; live broadcasting; live streaming service; on-demand streaming service; peer-to-peer networks; Anatomy; Availability; Broadcasting; Chromium; IP networks; Network servers; Next generation networking; Peer to peer computing; Scalability; System performance; live streaming; on demand; peer to peer;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Science and Information Engineering, 2009 WRI World Congress on
Conference_Location :
Los Angeles, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3507-4
DOI :
10.1109/CSIE.2009.354