Abstract

We suggest a novel approach to handle the ongoing explosive increase in the demand for video content in wireless/mobile devices. We envision femtocell-like base stations, which we call helpers, with weak backhaul links but large storage capacity. These helpers form a wireless distributed caching network that assists the macro base station by handling requests of popular files that have been cached. Due to the short distances between helpers and requesting devices, the transmission of cached files can be done very efficiently. A key question for such a system is the wireless distributed caching problem, i.e., which files should be cached by which helpers. If every mobile device has only access to a exactly one helper, then clearly each helper should cache the same files, namely the most popular ones. However, for the case that each mobile device can access multiple caches, the assignment of files to helpers becomes nontrivial. The theoretical contribution of our paper lies in (i) formalizing the distributed caching problem, (ii) showing that this problem is NP-hard, and (iii) presenting approximation algorithms that lie within a constant factor of the theoretical optimum. On the practical side, we present a detailed simulation of a university campus scenario covered by a single 3GPP LTE R8 cell and several helpers using a simplified 802.11n protocol. We use a real campus trace of video requests and show how distributed caching can increase the number served users by as much as 400 - 500%.

Keywords

Computer scienceCacheComputer networkWireless networkBase stationWirelessBackhaul (telecommunications)Distributed computingOperating system

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Publication Info

Year
2012
Type
article
Pages
1107-1115
Citations
745
Access
Closed

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745
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92
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528
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Cite This

Negin Golrezaei, Karthikeyan Shanmugam, Alexandros G. Dimakis et al. (2012). FemtoCaching: Wireless video content delivery through distributed caching helpers. 2012 Proceedings IEEE INFOCOM , 1107-1115. https://doi.org/10.1109/infcom.2012.6195469

Identifiers

DOI
10.1109/infcom.2012.6195469
arXiv
1109.4179

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Data completeness: 84%