PTP: Path-specified Transport Protocol for Concurrent Multipath Transmission in Named Data Networks
Yuhang Ye, Brian Lee, Ronan Flynn, Niall Murray, Guiming Fang, Jianwen, Cao, Yuansong Qiao

TL;DR
This paper proposes PTP, a new transport protocol for Named Data Networks that allows users to control traffic on each path, improving bandwidth utilization and scalability without complex load balancing.
Contribution
PTP introduces a path-specified transport protocol supporting label switching and addressless routing, enabling explicit traffic control and enhancing network performance.
Findings
PTP significantly increases user download rates.
PTP improves overall network throughput.
PTP reduces router computational complexity.
Abstract
Named Data Networking (NDN) is a promising Future Internet architecture to support content distribution. Its inherent addressless routing paradigm brings valuable characteristics to improve the transmission robustness and efficiency, e.g. users are enabled to download content from multiple providers concurrently. However, multipath transmission NDN is different from that in Multipath TCP, i.e. the "paths" in NDN are transparent to and uncontrollable by users. To this end, the user controls the traffic on all transmission paths as an entirety, which leads to a noticeable problem of low bandwidth utilization. In particular, the congestion of a certain path will trigger the traffic reduction on the other transmission paths that are underutilized. Some solutions have been proposed by letting routers balance the loads of different paths to avoid congesting a certain path prematurely.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCaching and Content Delivery · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Advanced Data Storage Technologies
