Title :
Characterizing Overlay Multicast Networks and Their Costs
Author :
Fahmy, Sonia ; Kwon, Minseok
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN
fDate :
4/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Overlay networks among cooperating hosts have recently emerged as a viable solution to several challenging problems, including multicasting, routing, content distribution, and peer-to-peer services. Application-level overlays, however, incur a performance penalty over router-level solutions. This paper quantifies and explains this performance penalty for overlay multicast trees via: 1) Internet experimental data; 2) simulations; and 3) theoretical models. We compare a number of overlay multicast protocols with respect to overlay tree structure, and underlying network characteristics. Experimental data and simulations illustrate that the mean number of hops and mean per-hop delay between parent and child hosts in overlay trees generally decrease as the level of the host in the overlay tree increases. Overlay multicast routing strategies, overlay host distribution, and Internet topology characteristics are identified as three primary causes of the observed phenomenon. We show that this phenomenon yields overlay tree cost savings: Our results reveal that the normalized cost L(n)/U(n) is propn0.9 for small n, where L(n) is the total number of hops in all overlay links, U(n) is the average number of hops on the source to receiver unicast paths, and n is the number of members in the overlay multicast session. This can be compared to an IP multicast cost proportional to n0.6 to n0.8
Keywords :
IP networks; Internet; multicast protocols; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication network topology; IP multicast cost; Internet topology characteristics; application-level overlays; content distribution service; mean per-hop delay; multicasting service; overlay host distribution; overlay multicast network characterization; overlay multicast protocols; overlay multicast routing strategy; overlay multicast trees; overlay tree cost savings; overlay tree structure; peer-to-peer service; router-level solutions; routing service; unicast paths; Analytical models; Bandwidth; Computer science; Costs; Delay; Internet; Network topology; Routing; Tree data structures; Unicast; Economies of scale; Internet multicast; group communication; overlay multicast; overlay networks;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2007.892847