Architecture and Performance Models for QoS-Driven Effective Peering of Content Delivery Networks
Mukaddim Pathan, Rajkumar Buyya

TL;DR
This paper proposes an architecture and performance modeling approach for enabling cooperative peering among Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) to improve user-perceived performance and resource sharing.
Contribution
It introduces a Virtual Organization-based architecture and a QoS-driven performance model for CDN peering, facilitating dynamic request distribution and SLA management.
Findings
Peering maintains user-perceived performance through QoS guarantees.
The model enables load balancing by offloading requests to peer CDNs.
The approach supports scalable, resource-sharing CDN networks.
Abstract
The proprietary nature of existing Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) means they are closed and do not naturally cooperate. A CDN is expected to provide high performance Internet content delivery through global coverage, which might be an obstacle for new CDN providers, as well as affecting commercial viability of existing ones. Finding ways for distinct CDNs to coordinate and cooperate with other CDNs is necessary to achieve better overall service, as perceived by end-users, at lower cost. In this paper, we present an architecture to support peering arrangements between CDNs, based on a Virtual Organization (VO) model. Our approach promotes peering among providers, while upholding user perceived performance. This is achieved through proper policy management of negotiated Service Level Agreements (SLAs) between peers. We also present a Quality of Service (QoS)-driven performance modeling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCaching and Content Delivery · Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies · Network Traffic and Congestion Control
