Emergent Mind

Heterogeneous download times in a homogeneous BitTorrent swarm

(1102.3610)
Published Feb 17, 2011 in cs.NI

Abstract

Modeling and understanding BitTorrent (BT) dynamics is a recurrent research topic mainly due to its high complexity and tremendous practical efficiency. Over the years, different models have uncovered various phenomena exhibited by the system, many of which have direct impact on its performance. In this paper we identify and characterize a phenomenon that has not been previously observed: homogeneous peers (with respect to their upload capacities) experience heterogeneous download rates. The consequences of this phenomenon have direct impact on peer and system performance, such as high variability of download times, unfairness with respect to peer arrival order, bursty departures and content synchronization. Detailed packet-level simulations and prototype-based experiments on the Internet were performed to characterize this phenomenon. We also develop a mathematical model that accurately predicts the heterogeneous download rates of the homogeneous peers as a function of their content. Although this phenomenon is more prevalent in unpopular swarms (very few peers), these by far represent the most common type of swarm in BT.

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