Publication | Closed Access
Optimizing the Throughput of Data-Driven Peer-to-Peer Streaming
75
Citations
27
References
2008
Year
Cluster ComputingNetwork FlowsEngineeringData-driven Peer-to-peer StreamingData ScienceScheduling ProblemEdge ComputingAdaptive Bitrate StreamingStreaming EngineCloud ComputingPeer-to-peer DatabaseScalable RoutingMulticastComputer ScienceLayered VideoData ManagementConstructed OverlayOverlay Network
During recent years, the Internet has witnessed a rapid growth in deployment of data-driven (or swarming based) peer-to-peer (P2P) media streaming. In these applications, each node independently selects some other nodes as its neighbors (i.e. gossip-style overlay construction), and exchanges streaming data with the neighbors (i.e. data scheduling). To improve the performance of such protocol, many existing works focus on the gossip-style overlay construction issue. However, few of them concentrate on optimizing the streaming data scheduling to maximize the throughput of a constructed overlay. In this paper, we analytically study the scheduling problem in data-driven streaming system and model it as a classical min-cost network flow problem. We then propose both the global optimal scheduling scheme and distributed heuristic algorithm to optimize the system throughput. Furthermore, we introduce layered video coding into data-driven protocol and extend our algorithm to deal with the end-host heterogeneity. The results of simulation with the real world traces indicate that our distributed algorithm significantly outperforms conventional ad hoc scheduling strategies especially in stringent buffer and bandwidth constraints.
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