학술논문

Evaluating the Performance of Apple’s Low-Latency HLS
Document Type
Conference
Source
2020 IEEE 22nd International Workshop on Multimedia Signal Processing (MMSP) Multimedia Signal Processing (MMSP),Multimedia Signal Processing (MMSP). :1-6 Sep, 2020
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Signal Processing and Analysis
Protocols
Content distribution networks
Scalability
Conferences
Signal processing
Servers
Standards
Language
ISSN
2473-3628
Abstract
In its annual developers conference in June 2019, Apple has announced a backwards-compatible extension to its popular HTTP Live Streaming (HLS) protocol to enable low-latency live streaming. This extension offers new features such as the ability to generate partial segments, use playlist delta updates, block playlist reload and provide rendition reports. Compared to the traditional HLS, these features require new capabilities on the origin servers and the caches inside a content delivery network. While HLS has been known to perform great at scale, its low-latency extension is likely to consume considerable server and network resources, and this may raise concerns about its scalability. In this paper, we make the first attempt to understand how this new extension works and performs. We also provide a 1:1 comparison against the low-latency DASH approach, which is the competing low-latency solution developed as an open standard.