Abstract

The explosive growth of content requests from mobile users is stretching the capability of current mobile networking technologies to satisfy users' demands with acceptable quality of service. An effective approach to address this challenge, which has not yet been thoroughly studied, is to offload network traffic by caching popular content at the edges (e.g., mobile devices and base stations) of mobile networks, thus reducing the massive duplication of content downloads. In this paper, we address the system modeling, large-scale optimization, and framework design of hierarchical edge caching in device-to-device aided mobile networks. In particular, taking into account the analysis of social behavior and preference of mobile users, heterogeneous cache sizes, and the derived system topology, we investigate the maximum capacity of the network infrastructure in terms of offloading network traffic, reducing system costs, and supporting content requests from mobile users locally. Our proposed framework has a low complexity and can be applied in practical engineering implementation. Trace-based simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework.

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