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[Author] Atsushi OOKA(5hit)

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  • Scalable Cache Component in ICN Adaptable to Various Network Traffic Access Patterns

    Atsushi OOKA  Eum SUYONG  Shingo ATA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2017/07/05
      Vol:
    E101-B No:1
      Page(s):
    35-48

    Information-centric networking (ICN) has received increasing attention from all over the world. The novel aspects of ICN (e.g., the combination of caching, multicasting, and aggregating requests) is based on names that act as addresses for content. The communication with name has the potential to cope with the growing and complicating Internet technology, for example, Internet of Things, cloud computing, and a smart society. To realize ICN, router hardware must implement an innovative cache replacement algorithm that offers performance far superior to a simple policy-based algorithm while still operating with feasible computational and memory overhead. However, most previous studies on cache replacement policies in ICN have proposed policies that are too blunt to achieve significant performance improvement, such as first-in first-out (popularly, FIFO) and random policies, or impractical policies in a resource-restricted environment, such as least recently used (LRU). Thus, we propose CLOCK-Pro Using Switching Hash-tables (CUSH) as the suitable policy for network caching. CUSH can identify and keep popular content worth caching in a network environment. CUSH also employs CLOCK and hash-tables, which are low-overhead data structure, to satisfy the cost requirement. We numerically evaluate our proposed approach, showing that our proposal can achieve cache hits against the traffic traces that simple conventional algorithms hardly cause any hits.

  • Cefore: Software Platform Enabling Content-Centric Networking and Beyond Open Access

    Hitoshi ASAEDA  Atsushi OOKA  Kazuhisa MATSUZONO  Ruidong LI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2019/03/22
      Vol:
    E102-B No:9
      Page(s):
    1792-1803

    Information-Centric or Content-Centric Networking (ICN/CCN) is a promising novel network architecture that naturally integrates in-network caching, multicast, and multipath capabilities, without relying on centralized application-specific servers. Software platforms are vital for researching ICN/CCN; however, existing platforms lack a focus on extensibility and lightweight implementation. In this paper, we introduce a newly developed software platform enabling CCN, named Cefore. In brief, Cefore is lightweight, with the ability to run even on top of a resource-constrained device, but is also easily extensible with arbitrary plugin libraries or external software implementations. For large-scale experiments, a network emulator (Cefore-Emu) and network simulator (Cefore-Sim) have also been developed for this platform. Both Cefore-Emu and Cefore-Sim support hybrid experimental environments that incorporate physical networks into the emulated/simulated networks. In this paper, we describe the design, specification, and usage of Cefore as well as Cefore-Emu and Cefore-Sim. We show performance evaluations of in-network caching and streaming on Cefore-Emu and content fetching on Cefore-Sim, verifying the salient features of the Cefore software platform.

  • High-Speed Design of Conflictless Name Lookup and Efficient Selective Cache on CCN Router

    Atsushi OOKA  Shingo ATA  Kazunari INOUE  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Network

      Vol:
    E98-B No:4
      Page(s):
    607-620

    Content-centric networking (CCN) is an innovative network architecture that is being considered as a successor to the Internet. In recent years, CCN has received increasing attention from all over the world because its novel technologies (e.g., caching, multicast, aggregating requests) and communication based on names that act as addresses for content have the potential to resolve various problems facing the Internet. To implement these technologies, however, requires routers with performance far superior to that offered by today's Internet routers. Although many researchers have proposed various router components, such as caching and name lookup mechanisms, there are few router-level designs incorporating all the necessary components. The design and evaluation of a complete router is the primary contribution of this paper. We provide a concrete hardware design for a router model that uses three basic tables — forwarding information base (FIB), pending interest table (PIT), and content store (CS) — and incorporates two entities that we propose. One of these entities is the name lookup entity, which looks up a name address within a few cycles from content-addressable memory by use of a Bloom filter; the other is the interest count entity, which counts interest packets that require certain content and selects content worth caching. Our contributions are (1) presenting a proper algorithm for looking up and matching name addresses in CCN communication, (2) proposing a method to process CCN packets in a way that achieves high throughput and very low latency, and (3) demonstrating feasible performance and cost on the basis of a concrete hardware design using distributed content-addressable memory.

  • Compact CAR: Low-Overhead Cache Replacement Policy for an ICN Router

    Atsushi OOKA  Suyong EUM  Shingo ATA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Network System

      Pubricized:
    2017/12/18
      Vol:
    E101-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1366-1378

    Information-centric networking (ICN) has gained attention from network research communities due to its capability of efficient content dissemination. In-network caching function in ICN plays an important role to achieve the design motivation. However, many researchers on in-network caching due to its ability to efficiently disseminate content. The in-network caching function in ICN plays an important role in realizing the design goals. However, many in-network caching researchers have focused on where to cache rather than how to cache: the former is known as content deployment in the network and the latter is known as cache replacement in an ICN router. Although the cache replacement has been intensively researched in the context of web-caching and content delivery network previously, networks, the conventional approaches cannot be directly applied to ICN due to the fine granularity of chunks in ICN, which eventually changes the access patterns. In this paper, we argue that ICN requires a novel cache replacement algorithm to fulfill the requirements in the design of a high performance ICN router. Then, we propose a novel cache replacement algorithm to satisfy the requirements named Compact CLOCK with Adaptive Replacement (Compact CAR), which can reduce the consumption of cache memory to one-tenth compared to conventional approaches. In this paper, we argue that ICN requires a novel cache replacement algorithm to fulfill the requirements set for high performance ICN routers. Our solution, Compact CLOCK with Adaptive Replacement (Compact CAR), is a novel cache replacement algorithm that satisfies the requirements. The evaluation result shows that the consumption of cache memory required to achieve a desired performance can be reduced by 90% compared to conventional approaches such as FIFO and CLOCK.

  • A Survey of Information-Centric Networking: The Quest for Innovation Open Access

    Hitoshi ASAEDA  Kazuhisa MATSUZONO  Yusaku HAYAMIZU  Htet Htet HLAING  Atsushi OOKA  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Network

      Pubricized:
    2023/08/22
      Vol:
    E107-B No:1
      Page(s):
    139-153

    Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is an innovative technology that provides low-loss, low-latency, high-throughput, and high-reliability communications for diversified and advanced services and applications. In this article, we present a technical survey of ICN functionalities such as in-network caching, routing, transport, and security mechanisms, as well as recent research findings. We focus on CCNx, which is a prominent ICN protocol whose message types are defined by the Internet Research Task Force. To facilitate the development of functional code and encourage application deployment, we introduce an open-source software platform called Cefore that facilitates CCNx-based communications. Cefore consists of networking components such as packet forwarding and in-network caching daemons, and it provides APIs and a Python wrapper program that enables users to easily develop CCNx applications for on Cefore. We introduce a Mininet-based Cefore emulator and lightweight Docker containers for running CCNx experiments on Cefore. In addition to exploring ICN features and implementations, we also consider promising research directions for further innovation.

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