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24th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS'04)
Adaptive Replication in Peer-to-Peer Systems
Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan
March 24-March 26
ISBN: 0-7695-2086-3
Vijay Gopalakrishnan, University of Maryland at College Park
Bujor Silaghi, University of Maryland at College Park
Bobby Bhattacharjee, University of Maryland at College Park
Pete Keleher, University of Maryland at College Park

Peer-to-peer systems can be used to form a low-latency decentralized data delivery system. Structured peer-to-peer systems provide both low latency and excellent load balance with uniform query and data distributions. Under the more common skewed access distributions, however, individual nodes are easily overloaded, resulting in poor global performance and lost messages.

This paper describes a lightweight, adaptive, and system-neutral replication protocol, called LAR, that maintains low access latencies and good load balance even under highly skewed demand. We apply LAR to Chord and show that it has lower overhead and better performance than existing replication strategies.

Citation:
Vijay Gopalakrishnan, Bujor Silaghi, Bobby Bhattacharjee, Pete Keleher, "Adaptive Replication in Peer-to-Peer Systems," icdcs, pp.360-369, 24th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS'04), 2004
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