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A new scheme on recovery from failure in NICE overlay protocol

Published: 30 May 2006 Publication History

Abstract

Overlay networks have been an active area of research for the past few years. The control overhead and the recovery from failure are the two important issues in the topology aware embedded overlay networks. In this research, we have introduced an enhanced version of the NICE protocol, called resilient NICE (R-NICE) that reduces the control overhead significantly. Furthermore, by saving the join path for an end host, the time and overhead of rejoining for isolated nodes have also been reduced. This will cause the clusters and consequently the overall network to become more stable and the effect of a node failure become localized. Our experimental results have confirmed the superior performance of R-NICE in comparison to NICE in terms of control overhead and recovery from failure.

References

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Eng Keong Lua, Jon Crowcroft and et. al "A survey and comparison of peer-to-peer overlay network schemes", in IEEE communication survey and tutorial, March 2004.
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C. K. Yeo, B. S. Lee, M. H. Er., "A survey of application level multicast techniques", Computer Communications 27 (15): 1547--1568 (2004)
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S. Banerjee, B. Bhattacharjee, C. Kommareddy, "Scaleable application layer multicast", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM, August 2002.
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D. A. Tran, K. A. Hua. "ZIGZAG: an efficient peer-to-peer scheme for media streaming", INFOCOM 2003. Twenty-Second Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies. IEEE, Vol. 2, Iss., 30 March-3 April 2003 Pages: 1283-- 1292 Vol. 2
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Richard Hsiao, Sheng-De Wang. "Jelly: A Dynamic Hierarchical P2P Overlay Network with Load Balance and Locality," icdcsw, Vol. 04, no. 4, pp. 534--540, 24th 2004.
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cover image ACM Other conferences
InfoScale '06: Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Scalable information systems
May 2006
512 pages
ISBN:1595934286
DOI:10.1145/1146847
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 30 May 2006

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InfoScale '06 Paper Acceptance Rate 33 of 91 submissions, 36%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 33 of 91 submissions, 36%

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