Abstract

A number of applications such as internet video broadcasts, corporate telecasts, distance learning etc. require transmission of streaming video to multiple simultaneous users across an internetwork. The high bandwidth requirements coupled with the multi-timescale burstiness of compressed video make it a challenging problem to provision network resources for transmitting streaming multimedia. For such applications to become affordable and ubiquitous, it is necessary to develop scalable techniques which can efficiently deliver streaming video to multiple heterogeneous clients across a heterogeneous internetwork. We propose using multicasting of smoothed video and differential caching of the video at intermediate nodes in the distribution tree, as techniques for reducing the network bandwidth requirements of such dissemination. We formulate the multicast smoothing problem, and develop an algorithm for computing the set of optimally smoothed transmission schedules for the tree (such that the transmission schedule along each link in the tree has the lowest peak rate and rate variability for any feasible transmission schedule for that link) given a buffer allocation to the different nodes in the tree. We also develop an algorithm to compute the minimum total buffer allocation to the entire tree and the corresponding allocation to each node, such that feasible transmission is possible to all the clients, when the tree has heterogeneous rate constraints. MPEG-2 trace-driven performance evaluations indicate that there are substantial benefits from multicast smoothing and differential caching. For example, the optimal multicast smoothing can reduce the total transmission bandwidth requirements in the distribution tree by more than a factor of 3 as compared to multicasting the unsmoothed stream.

Full Text
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