1 / 9

Peer-to-peer and WiFi

Peer-to-peer and WiFi. Jon Crowcroft The Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge jon.crowcroft@cl.cam.ac.uk. People and Projects in Cambridge . Faculty: Jon Crowcroft, Ian Pratt Research Staff: Sven Ostring, + PhDs: Rajiv Chakravorty & Meng How Lim Projects: COM(vodafone) CMI

lee-sears
Download Presentation

Peer-to-peer and WiFi

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Peer-to-peer and WiFi Jon Crowcroft The Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge jon.crowcroft@cl.cam.ac.uk

  2. People and Projects in Cambridge • Faculty: • Jon Crowcroft, Ian Pratt • Research Staff: • Sven Ostring, + • PhDs: • Rajiv Chakravorty & Meng How Lim • Projects: • COM(vodafone) • CMI • MobileMAN

  3. Mobileman Kickoff MeetingPisa, 5/11/02 • P2P & WiFi • Spectrum Economics

  4. Analysis of Self Organisation • It has been noted that peer-to-peer and ad hoc wireless networks both use techniques of self organisation • We would like to examine this similarity properly • Analyse which particular techniques are useful (e.g. routing, load management, etc) • See if we can create a next generation ad hoc wireless net – one step beyond the 2 level system in terminode networks (perimiter + spine) • Infocom + followup proxinet paper…soar?

  5. Location Services Experiment • P2p makes use of techniques such as consistent hashing, rabin fingerprints, bloom filters and so on, for mapping key to location • Perhaps a similar model could be used for addressing • Would note that these often lead to very poor latency • Techniques such as landmarks, shortcuts, lighthouse, chord etc are worth looking at • Paper submitted to IPTPS on “lighthouses”

  6. Notification Services • Could look at Scribe (P2P based Event service based on Pastry) • Could look at event services as driving model – could be information or applications like games…. • Problem of effort levels! • Have to enlist PhDs at cambridge!!!…

  7. Performance Enhancing Overlays • P2p and overlays are dual. • We would like to look at the interaction between overlays and underlying mobile/wireless dynamics • We have looked at a system of TCP proxies to mitigate performance problems in wireless access nets (have Infocom 03 paper on this) – we could extend this to ad hoc multi-hop/multi-path systems too • Other overlays (e.g. application specific routing and trans-coders etc are of interest too.

  8. Cambridge Mobileman P2P Research Topics • Analysis • Experimental Application Platform • Tests for Performance

  9. Relevant p2p technologies • Pastry/Scribe/Xenostore – • Storage, notification, searching • Consistent Hash + location • Eternity, Freenet • Privacy, persistence,caching • Robustness • Rabin fingerprint, bloom filter • ALAN/Overqos/RON • App level routing

More Related