A cost‐efficient QoS‐aware analytical model of future software content delivery networks
Beatriz Otero,
Eva Rodríguez,
Otilio Rojas,
Javier Verdú,
Juan José Costa,
Manuel Alejandro Pajuelo and
Ramón Canal
International Journal of Network Management, 2021, vol. 31, issue 4
Abstract:
Freelance, part‐time, work‐at‐home, and other flexible jobs are changing the concept of workplace and bringing information and content exchange problems to companies. Geographically, spread corporations may use remote distribution of software and data to attend employees' demands, by exploiting emerging delivery technologies. In this context, cost‐efficient software distribution is crucial to allow business evolution and make IT infrastructures more agile. On the other hand, container‐based virtualization technology is shaping the new trends of software deployment and infrastructure design. We envision current and future enterprise IT management trends evolving towards container‐based software delivery over hybrid content delivery networks (CDNs). This paper presents a novel cost‐efficient QoS‐aware analytical model and a hybrid CDN–peer‐to‐peer (P2P) architecture for enterprise software distribution. The model would allow delivery cost minimization for a wide range of companies, from big multinationals to SMEs, using CDN–P2P distribution under various industrial hypothetical scenarios. Model constraints guarantee acceptable deployment times and keep interchanged content amounts below the bandwidth and storage network limits in our scenarios. Indeed, key model parameters account for network bandwidth, storage limits, and rental prices, which are empirically determined from their offered values by the commercial delivery networks KeyCDN, MaxCDN, CDN77, and BunnyCDN. This preliminary study indicates that MaxCDN offers the best cost‐QoS trade‐off. The model is implemented in the network simulation tool PeerSim and then applied to diverse testing scenarios by varying company types, number and profile (either, technical or administrative) of employees, and the number and size of content requests. Hybrid simulation results show overall economic savings between 5% and 20%, compared to just hiring resources from a commercial CDN, while guaranteeing satisfactory QoS levels in terms of deployment times and number of served requests.
Date: 2021
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https://doi.org/10.1002/nem.2137
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wly:intnem:v:31:y:2021:i:4:n:e2137
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