Book chapters details

  • On Adding Structure to Unstructured Overlay Networks
  • Jan 2010
  • Unstructured peer-to-peer overlay networks are very resilient to churn and topology changes, while requiring little maintenance cost. Therefore, they are an infrastructure to build highly scalable large-scale services in dynamic networks. Typically, the overlay topology is defined by a peer sampling service that aims at maintaining, in each process, a random partial view of peers in the system. The resulting random unstructured topology is suboptimal when a specific performance metric is considered. On the other hand, structured approaches (for instance, a spanning tree) may optimize a given target performance metric but are highly fragile. In fact, the cost for maintaining structures with strong constraints may easily become prohibitive in highly dynamic networks. This chapter discusses different techniques that aim at combining the advantages of unstructured and structured networks. Namely we focus on two distinct approaches, one based on optimizing the overlay and another based on optimizing the gossip mechanism itself.
  • Handbook of Peer-to-Peer Networking
  • Springer-Verlag
  • João Leitão, Nuno Carvalho, José Orlando Pereira, Rui Oliveira, Luís Rodrigues, Luis Rodrigues
  • 1
  • 978-0-387-09750-3
  • http://http://www.springer.com/engineering/signals/book/978-0-387-09750-3
  • 0 to 0
  • 1 Jan 2010