CCDN: Content-Centric Data Center Networks
2016
Data center networks continually seek higher network performance to meet the ever increasing application demand. Recently, researchers are exploring the method to enhance the data center network performance by intelligent caching and increasing the access points for hot data chunks. Motivated by this, we come up with a simple yet useful caching mechanism for generic data centers, i.e., a server caches a data chunk after an application on it reads the chunk from the file system, and then uses the cached chunk to serve subsequent chunk requests from nearby servers. To turn the basic idea above into a practical system and address the challenges behind it, we design content-centric data center networks (CCDNs), which exploits an innovative combination of content-based forwarding and location [Internet Protocol (IP)]-based forwarding in switches, to correctly locate the target server for a data chunk on a fully distributed basis. Furthermore, CCDN enhances traditional content-based forwarding to determine the nearest target server, and enhances traditional location (IP)-based forwarding to make high utilization of the precious memory space in switches. Extensive simulations based on real-world workloads and experiments on a test bed built with NetFPGA prototypes show that, even with a small portion of the server’s storage as cache (e.g., 3%) and with a modest content forwarding information base size (e.g., 1000 entries) in switches, CCDN can improve the average throughput to get data chunks by 43% compared with a pure Hadoop File System (HDFS) system in a real data center.
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