Abstract
Periodic broadcasting (PB) is a scalable technique for providing video-on-demand services. It significantly reduces server input and output (I/O) and backbone network bandwidth requirements, but increases the clients' need for storage space and network bandwidth. Traditional protocols assume homogeneous clients with identical resources. In practice, however, clients have very different bandwidths, which are usually not sufficient for video-on-demand service from a PB server. Existing work on heterogeneous clients has focused on devising broadcast schedules that cater to low-bandwidth clients; these schedules inevitably require additional backbone network bandwidth between the server and the clients. In this paper, we propose a scheme to significantly reduce the waiting time of all heterogeneous clients, without the need for any additional backbone bandwidth. This scheme uses a proxy buffer within video-on-demand systems using PB. In the proposed system, the server broadcasts a video using one of the traditional PB protocols. Simultaneously, the proxy receives the stream from the server and stores it in its local buffer, then broadcasts the stored data to the clients in its local network. Because the proxy provides extra, transparent channels to the server, clients are likely to reduce their reception bandwidth requirements through the use of efficient reception schedules using the extra channels.
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