학술논문

Dynamics and cachability of Web sites: implications for inverted capacity networks
Document Type
Conference
Source
The 11th IEEE International Conference on Networks, 2003. ICON2003. Networks-ICON '03 Networks, 2003. ICON2003. The 11th IEEE International Conference on. :45-50 2003
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Bandwidth
Spine
IP networks
Web and internet services
Telecommunication traffic
Circuits
Web sites
World Wide Web
Optical fiber networks
Australia
Language
ISSN
1531-2216
Abstract
The traditional Internet access model involves low bandwidth last-mile circuits and high bandwidth backbones. Imagine that in the future the last-mile becomes a high bandwidth service. In such an inverted capacity network content caching in the access network becomes essential to avoid backbone congestion and improve user experience but on the other hand the high access bandwidth also offers opportunities for new caching mechanisms. We focus on the Web as the most important and well-established content service. With respect to caching the question is how much of the Web content is cachable and what is the dynamic behavior? In this paper we analyze the cachability and dynamic behavior of a number of Web sites and the implications for an inverted capacity network. In contrast to previous work we use an active approach for collecting the measurement data to be able to analyze complete Web sites instead of subsets accessed by a specific user group over a certain time period.