Practical accounting in content-centric networking | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Practical accounting in content-centric networking


Abstract:

Content-Centric Networking (CCN) is a recent network paradigm designed to address some key limitations of the current IP-based Internet. One of its main features is innet...Show More

Abstract:

Content-Centric Networking (CCN) is a recent network paradigm designed to address some key limitations of the current IP-based Internet. One of its main features is innetwork content caching which allows requests for content to be served by routers. Despite the benefits of improved bandwidth utilization and lower latency of retrieving popular content, innetwork caching inhibits producers from collecting information about content that is requested and later served from network caches. Such information is often needed for accounting and popularity purposes. In this paper, we address accounting in CCN by varying the degree of consumer, router, and producer involvement. We also identify and analyze inherent performance and security tradeoffs. We show that fine-grained accounting is infeasible with router caches and without explicit application support. We then recommend accounting strategies that entail a few simple requirements for CCN architectures. Finally, we show, via experimental results, that network-layer CCN accounting is viable and incurs low overhead for all parties involved. approaches.
Date of Conference: 25-29 April 2016
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 04 July 2016
Electronic ISBN:978-1-5090-0223-8
Electronic ISSN: 2374-9709
Conference Location: Istanbul, Turkey

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