Abstract

It is a paradigm shift in internet architecture from receiver centric model to the information centric networking (ICN) model to improve the end-users' latency experience. With exponential increment in number of users and data volume, efficient usage of the nodes (caches) and content forwarding methodology are key issues in an ICN architecture. In ICN intra-domain routers have storage capacity and they can act as temporary content provider, therefore it reduces average hop count and correspondingly average delay for content download. In this article, we formulate the content management issues in a cache having finite storage capability and propose an efficient content management policy that metamorphoses a node to a self-sustained cache. We address how content packets are stored in buffer of the cache before processing and how they suffer from several finite propagation delays during the processing in a cache. We simulate our proposition with deploying real-life network environment and calculate user experience metrics like average latency, throughput and good-put. From simulation results we observe that our proposed model outperforms the existing state-of-the-art on-path caching policies.

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