Building low-diameter P2P networks
Author(s) -
G. Pandurangan,
P. Raghavan,
E. Upfal
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
proceedings 42nd ieee symposium on foundations of computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
pISSN - 1552-5244
ISBN - 0-7695-1116-3
DOI - 10.1109/sfcs.2001.959925
Subject(s) - computing and processing , communication, networking and broadcast technologies
In a peer-to-peer (P2P) network, nodes connect into an existing network and participate in providing and availing of services. There is no dichotomy between a central server and distributed clients. Current P2P networks (e.g., Gnutella) are constructed by participants following their own uncoordinated (and often whimsical) protocols; they consequently suffer from frequent network overload and fragmentation into disconnected pieces separated by choke-points with inadequate bandwidth. The authors propose a simple scheme for participants to build P2P networks in a distributed fashion, and prove that it results in connected networks of constant degree and logarithmic diameter. It does so with no global knowledge of all the nodes in the network. In the most common P2P application to date (search), these properties are important.
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