FlowTele: Remotely Shaping Traffic on Internet-Scale Networks

12Citations
Citations of this article
3Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Internet content providers often deliver content through bandwidth bottlenecks that are out of their control. Thus, despite often having massively over-provisioned upstream servers, the content providers still cannot control the end-to-end user experience. This paper explores remote traffic shaping, allowing the content provider to allocate its share of a remote bottleneck link across its users using a metric other than TCP fairness, while remaining TCP-friendly to cross traffic on the bottleneck link. To evaluate this approach, we designed FlowTele, the first system that shapes outbound traffic on an Internet-scale network to optimize provider-selected metrics, using source control with neither in-network support nor special client support. Our extensive evaluations over the Internet show that by strategically reallocating bandwidth among provider-owned co-bottlenecked flows, FlowTele improves the provider's total revenue by roughly 20% - 30% in various network settings, compared with both (i) status quo TCP fairshare and (ii) recent practice by content providers that proactively throttles video quality during the COVID-19 pandemic, while being TCP-friendly to cross-traffic. Besides revenue, we also study other metrics, such as QoE fairness, that a content provider may wish to optimize using FlowTele.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chen, B. R., Liu, Z., Song, J., Zeng, F., Zhu, Z., Bachu, S. P. K., & Hu, Y. C. (2022). FlowTele: Remotely Shaping Traffic on Internet-Scale Networks. In CoNEXT 2022 - Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on emerging Networking EXperiments and Technologies (pp. 349–368). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3555050.3569139

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free