Timely, Reliable, and Cost-Effective Internet Transport Service using Structured Overlay Networks

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Date
2018-09-26
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Johns Hopkins University
Abstract
Emerging applications such as remote manipulation and remote robotic surgery require communication that is both timely and reliable, but the Internet natively supports only communication that is either completely reliable with no timeliness guarantees (e.g. TCP) or timely with best-effort reliability (e.g. UDP). We present an overlay transport service that can provide highly reliable communication while meeting stringent timeliness guarantees (e.g. 130ms round-trip latency across the US) over the Internet. To enable routing schemes that can support the necessary timeliness and reliability, we introduce dissemination graphs, providing a unified framework for specifying routing schemes ranging from a single path, to multiple disjoint paths, to arbitrary graphs. We conduct an extensive analysis of real-world network data, finding that a routing approach using two disjoint paths performs well in most cases, and that cases where two disjoint paths do not perform well typically involve problems around a source or destination. Based on this analysis, we develop a timely dissemination-graph-based routing method that can add targeted redundancy in problematic areas of the network. We show that this approach covers nearly 99% of the performance gap between a traditional single-path approach and an optimal (but prohibitively expensive) scheme, while two dynamic disjoint paths cover about 70% of this gap, and two static disjoint paths cover about 40%. This performance improvement is obtained at an overall cost increase of less than 1% compared with using two disjoint paths. The implementation of the dissemination-graph-based Internet transport service is available in the open-source Spines overlay messaging framework (www.spines.org).
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Keywords
overlay network, dissemination graph, structured overlay, timely reliable communication
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