Abstract

The presence of bottlenecks in the Internet reduces the performance of content delivery in typical client-server applications such as Web browsing and media streaming. Caching and server farm architectures have been a good solution to this problem since the World Wide Web became very popular, but now they are not enough to support new e-business solutions. Content delivery networks (CDNs) distribute content by placing it on several surrogate servers across the Internet and try to overcome these bottlenecks. In CDN scenarios a good request routing algorithm selects the best surrogate for a client's request; it makes its decision using metrics received by the network and the surrogate. Typical metrics are network latency, hop count, available Internet bandwidth, and surrogate load. We analyze the impact of different request routing algorithms on the delivery performance of CDNs. A new request routing algorithm, called WSE (worst surrogate exclusion), is proposed. Worst surrogate exclusion excludes those surrogates that provide the client with low performance and prevents surrogates overloading. Simulation results show that WSE can reduce users average response time and efficaciously exploit the CDN's capacity.

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