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ICC
2007
IEEE

On the Cohabitation of Adaptive Search Radius Enabled Peers with Regular eMule Peers

14 years 5 months ago
On the Cohabitation of Adaptive Search Radius Enabled Peers with Regular eMule Peers
— Adaptive Search Radius (ASR) is a peer selection method that can be used in Peer-to-Peer (P2P) file sharing applications, such as eMule or BitTorrent, in order to reduce the generated traffic. ASR enabled peers try to exchange file parts with the peers which are topologically closer, instead of swapping parts indiscriminately with peers near and far. Traffic travels fewer hops, resulting in fewer congested links, less traffic through tier-1 ISP’s core links and less traffic exchanged among ISPs. We believe it would be easier for ASR to be accepted if it was presented as an enhancement or modification to current P2P applications, instead of an entirely new application. In this paper we study the use of ASR with the eMule protocol and the impact a progressive migration would have. We found that
Ricardo Lopes Pereira, Teresa Vazão
Added 02 Jun 2010
Updated 02 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where ICC
Authors Ricardo Lopes Pereira, Teresa Vazão
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