TY - GEN
T1 - Study on trust-based maintenance of overlays in structured P2P systems
AU - Ding, Xin
AU - Koyanagi, Keiichi
PY - 2011/12/26
Y1 - 2011/12/26
N2 - Structured peer-to-peer overlay maintenance mechanisms require efficient methods to find stale routing table entries and replace them with new entries in a way that retains the desired routing behavior. Futhermore, overlay maintenance algorithms require to be devised to handle peer churn, the continuous process of node arrival and departure. Existing strategies of selecting new entries for routing tables are usually based on logical identifiers or proximity. Non-trust neighborhood selection criterion is used. Over the past decade, a respectable number of e-commerce companies, such as Amazon, eBay, and NetFlix, have deployed trust in ranking their products and suppliers. Such rankings are capitalized as effective incentives and low-cost mechanisms, letting e-commerce companies enhance product marketing and sales management. Since the use of trust has brought many benefits to e-commerce companies, we propose to introduce trust to structured P2P overlay maintenance. In this paper, we propose a trust-based maintenance strategy, using quantified "trust" as the judge criterion for neighbor selection and next-hop selection during routing, considering different aspects of trust in common structured P2P systems. The simulation results show that our maintenance strategy, applying to Chord, leads to lower maintenance overhead, while the mean hops of queries are slightly increased but remain O(logN), where N denotes the network size, compared with original Chord.
AB - Structured peer-to-peer overlay maintenance mechanisms require efficient methods to find stale routing table entries and replace them with new entries in a way that retains the desired routing behavior. Futhermore, overlay maintenance algorithms require to be devised to handle peer churn, the continuous process of node arrival and departure. Existing strategies of selecting new entries for routing tables are usually based on logical identifiers or proximity. Non-trust neighborhood selection criterion is used. Over the past decade, a respectable number of e-commerce companies, such as Amazon, eBay, and NetFlix, have deployed trust in ranking their products and suppliers. Such rankings are capitalized as effective incentives and low-cost mechanisms, letting e-commerce companies enhance product marketing and sales management. Since the use of trust has brought many benefits to e-commerce companies, we propose to introduce trust to structured P2P overlay maintenance. In this paper, we propose a trust-based maintenance strategy, using quantified "trust" as the judge criterion for neighbor selection and next-hop selection during routing, considering different aspects of trust in common structured P2P systems. The simulation results show that our maintenance strategy, applying to Chord, leads to lower maintenance overhead, while the mean hops of queries are slightly increased but remain O(logN), where N denotes the network size, compared with original Chord.
KW - Chord
KW - PlP
KW - churn
KW - maintenance
KW - trust
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84055176108&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84055176108&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ICCPS.2011.6089940
DO - 10.1109/ICCPS.2011.6089940
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84055176108
SN - 9781457706035
T3 - 2011 International Conference on Computational Problem-Solving, ICCP 2011
SP - 598
EP - 603
BT - 2011 International Conference on Computational Problem-Solving, ICCP 2011
T2 - 2011 International Conference on Computational Problem-Solving, ICCP 2011
Y2 - 21 October 2011 through 23 October 2011
ER -