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The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution

Publication ,  Journal Article
Doyle, RP; Chase, JS; Gadde, S; Vahdat, AM
Published in: Computer Communications
March 1, 2002

Web proxies and Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) are widely used to accelerate Web content delivery and to conserve Internet bandwidth. These caching agents are highly effective for static content, which is an important component of all Web-based services. This paper explores the effect of ubiquitous Web caching on the request patterns seen by other components of an end-to-end content delivery architecture, including Web server clusters and interior caches. In particular, object popularity distributions in the Web tend to be Zipf-like, but caches disproportionately absorb requests for the most popular objects, changing the reference properties of the filtered request stream in fundamental ways. We call this the trickle-down effect. This paper uses trace-driven simulation and synthetic traffic patterns to illustrate the trickle-down effect and to investigate its impact on other components of a content delivery architecture, focusing on the implications for request distribution strategies in server clusters. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Computer Communications

DOI

ISSN

0140-3664

Publication Date

March 1, 2002

Volume

25

Issue

4

Start / End Page

345 / 356

Related Subject Headings

  • Networking & Telecommunications
  • 4606 Distributed computing and systems software
  • 4009 Electronics, sensors and digital hardware
  • 4006 Communications engineering
  • 1005 Communications Technologies
  • 0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • 0805 Distributed Computing
 

Citation

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Doyle, R. P., Chase, J. S., Gadde, S., & Vahdat, A. M. (2002). The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution. Computer Communications, 25(4), 345–356. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-3664(01)00406-6
Doyle, R. P., J. S. Chase, S. Gadde, and A. M. Vahdat. “The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution.” Computer Communications 25, no. 4 (March 1, 2002): 345–56. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-3664(01)00406-6.
Doyle RP, Chase JS, Gadde S, Vahdat AM. The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution. Computer Communications. 2002 Mar 1;25(4):345–56.
Doyle, R. P., et al. “The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution.” Computer Communications, vol. 25, no. 4, Mar. 2002, pp. 345–56. Scopus, doi:10.1016/S0140-3664(01)00406-6.
Doyle RP, Chase JS, Gadde S, Vahdat AM. The trickle-down effect: Web caching and server request distribution. Computer Communications. 2002 Mar 1;25(4):345–356.
Journal cover image

Published In

Computer Communications

DOI

ISSN

0140-3664

Publication Date

March 1, 2002

Volume

25

Issue

4

Start / End Page

345 / 356

Related Subject Headings

  • Networking & Telecommunications
  • 4606 Distributed computing and systems software
  • 4009 Electronics, sensors and digital hardware
  • 4006 Communications engineering
  • 1005 Communications Technologies
  • 0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • 0805 Distributed Computing