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10th International Workshop on Web Content Caching and Distribution (WCW'05)
Predictability of Web-Server Traffic Congestion
Sophia Antipolis, France
September 12-September 13
ISBN: 0-7695-2455-9
Yuliy Baryshnikov, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies
Ed Coffman, Columbia University, New York
Guillaume Pierre, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
Dan Rubenstein, Columbia University, New York
Mark Squillante, IBM T.J.Watson Research Center
Teddy Yimwadsana, Columbia University, New York

Large swings in the demand for content are commonplace within the Internet. When a traffic hotspot happens, however, there is a delay before measures such as heavy replication of content can be applied. This paper investigates the potential for predicting hotspots sufficiently far, albeit shortly, in advance, so that preventive action can be taken before the hotpot takes place.

Performing accurate load predictions appears to be a daunting challenge at first glance, but this paper shows that, when applied to web-server page-request traffic, even elementary prediction techniques can have a surprising forecasting power. We first argue this predictability from principles, and then confirm it by the analysis of empirical data, which reveals that large server overloads can often be seen well in advance. This allows steps to be taken to reduce substantially the degradation of service quality.

Citation:
Yuliy Baryshnikov, Ed Coffman, Guillaume Pierre, Dan Rubenstein, Mark Squillante, Teddy Yimwadsana, "Predictability of Web-Server Traffic Congestion," wcw, pp.97-103, 10th International Workshop on Web Content Caching and Distribution (WCW'05), 2005
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