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SASO
2007
IEEE

Improving ICE Service Selection in a P2P System using the Gradient Topology

13 years 10 months ago
Improving ICE Service Selection in a P2P System using the Gradient Topology
Internet Connectivity Establishment (ICE) is becoming increasingly important for P2P systems on the open Internet, as it enables NAT-bound peers to provide accessible services. A problem for P2P systems that provide ICE services is how peers discover good quality ICE servers for NAT traversal, that is, the TURN and STUN servers that provide relaying and hole-punching services, respectively. Skype provides a P2P-based solution to this problem, where super-peers provide ICE services. However, experimental analysis of Skype indicates that peers perform a random walk of super-peers to find one with an acceptable roundtrip latency. In this paper, we discuss a self-organizing approach to discovering good quality ICE servers in a P2P system based the walk Topology. The walk Topology uses information about each peer’s ability to provide ICE services (open IP address, available bandwidth and expected session times) to construct a topology where the “better” peers for providing ICE servi...
Jim Dowling, Jan Sacha, Seif Haridi
Added 04 Jun 2010
Updated 04 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where SASO
Authors Jim Dowling, Jan Sacha, Seif Haridi
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