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Efficient Content Distribution on Internet

Efficient Content Distribution on Internet. Who pays for showing a Web page to a user?. Receiving side Users pay to small ISPs, who pay to big ISPs, who pay to even bigger ISPs; Concerns: reduce traffic / better response time Sending side

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Efficient Content Distribution on Internet

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  1. Efficient Content Distribution on Internet

  2. Who pays for showing a Web page to a user? • Receiving side • Users pay to small ISPs, who pay to big ISPs, who pay to even bigger ISPs; • Concerns: reduce traffic / better response time • Sending side • Web sites pay to ISP, or aggregators of ISPs (example: broadcast, akamai); • Concerns? It depends...

  3. A Simplistic View: Two Kinds of Web Sites • Portals: really want to be seen and want to be seen with high quality • Libraries: be available

  4. Who should pay for showing a Web page to the user? 1. Library pages: the user 2. Portal pages: the Web site Many ISPs so far are focusing on 1 (the users, cutting down traffic), and ignoring 2 (the content providers, QoS) • the ignorance creates a vacuum that lets akamai.com flourish

  5. What should be done? • A mechanism that links ISPs and Portals • Addressing the logistical difficulties: • One ISP charging many portals for content delivery; • One portals getting certain assurance of QoS from many ISPs • Trust between the parties • The mechanism should also be efficient • Caching, Replication, Routing, Differentiality

  6. Peregrine Net Inc. • To ISP: • Caching proxy • Caching proxy plus services --- 1-6 months • Content distribution box • To Portals: • Web acceleration proxy • ISP-coordinated QoS and load distribution --- 1-6 months • URL rewrite for content distribution

  7. The Proxy Products • Runs on Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, NT and other standard OS • Scales from < 10Mb/s to over 4Gb/s • Tiered pricing: • <10Mb/s: free • 10Mb/s - 30Mb/s: $2K-4K per copy • 30Mb/s - 60Mb/s: $10K per copy or appliance • 60Mb/s - 155Mb/s: more expensive • 155Mb/s and up: clustering, even more expensive

  8. Service 1: Premium Content Management • Portals pay ISP for each object delivered from cache • * Optimal cache management balancing needs of users and thost of portals • * Efficient hit reporting to portals • Establishing trust: • Third-party inspection of software • statistical analysis of hit reports • Estimated time: 2 months

  9. Service 2: Active Cache Proxy • Caching objects instead of datagrams • Web servers provide a piece of code (cache applet) that is associated with an object • The object and code are cached at the proxy; upon cache hit, the code is executed to generate responses • Example: user-customized Web pages • Benefit: Scale the Web server! • Estimated time: 3-6 months

  10. Service 3: Content Distribution • Routing methods: • At Web server: rewrite URLs for image objects • what Sandpiper and Akamai are doing • At proxy: redirect URLs to content distribution box, or mark objects as permanently cached • * Optimal load balancing • Constant server + network load-monitoring • * Efficient content authentication • Estimated time: 3-6 months

  11. Service 4: Rent-A-Server • Rent when needed: • Web accelerator monitoring the load • If load exceeds limit, redirect or route requests to “rental” servers • Rental servers capable of handling dynamic contents via process migration technology • * Optimal server selection algorithm • Estimated time: 6 months

  12. How are we different from everyone else? • We do what everyone else does • We return part of the profits to ISPs, who carry the bits But, in addition • Everyone uses our proxies • Proxies control the routing • Proxies can do arbitrary transformation on the URLs

  13. Additional Service: Mining the Log • Web server performance data • User auto-rating of search results • Which item really answered the user’s question? Guess it from user’s surfing • Technique: build the user’s surfing graph with the search result as root • User-profiling and feedback to Ad servers

  14. Looking Forward: Efficient Video Content Distribution • Caching proxy capable of handling video streams • A hierarchy of caching proxies for video distribution • * Efficient “Prefix-Caching” algorithm • * Object popularity probing, and optional Satellite distribution for very popular objects

  15. Steps to get there • 1. proxy product and sales • Current beta testers: Siemens AG, Union Bank of Swiss, NetOne (Japan), a medium-size ISP in UK, JANET in UK • 2. Premium content management, active caching proxy, content distribution service • 3. Rent-A-Server After sufficient proxy deployment: log-mining and video distribution

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