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SkipNet: A Scalable Overlay Network with Practical Locality Properties
Scalable overlay networks such as Chord, CAN, Pastry, and Tapestry have recently emerged as flexible infrastructure for building large peer-to-peer systems. In practice, such systems have two disadvantages: They provide no control over where data is stored and no guarantee that routing paths remain within an administrative domain whenever possible. SkipNet is a scalable overlay network that provides controlled data placement and guaranteed routing locality by organizing data primarily by string names. SkipNet allows for both fine-grained and coarse-grained control over data placement: Content can be placed either on a pre-determined node or distributed uniformly across the nodes of a hierarchical naming subtree. An additional useful consequence of SkipNet's locality properties is that partition failures, in which an entire organization disconnects from the rest of the system, can result in two disjoint, but well-connected overlay networks.
author = {Nicholas J. A. Harvey and Michael B. Jones and Stefan Saroiu and Marvin Theimer and Alec Wolman},
title = {{SkipNet}: A Scalable Overlay Network with Practical Locality Properties},
booktitle = {4th USENIX Symposium on Internet Technologies and Systems (USITS 03)},
year = {2003},
address = {Seattle, WA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/usits-03/skipnet-scalable-overlay-network-practical-locality-properties},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = mar
}
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