Named Data Networking (NDN) is a proposed future Internet architecture that shifts the fundamental abstraction of the network from host-to-host communication to request-response for named, signed data-an information dissemination focused approach. This paper describes a general design for receiver-driven, real-time streaming data (RTSD) applications over the current NDN implementation that aims to take advantage of the architecture's unique affordances. It is based on experimental development and testing of running code for real-time video conferencing, a positional tracking system for interactive multimedia, and a distributed control system for live performance. The design includes initial approaches to minimizing latency, managing buffer size and Interest retransmission, and adapting retrieval to maximize bandwidth and control congestion. Initial implementations of these approaches are evaluated for functionality and performance results, and the potential for future research in this area, and improved performance as new features of the architecture become available, is discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Gusev, P., Wang, Z., Burke, J., Zhang, L., Yoneda, T., Ohnishi, R., & Muramoto, E. (2016). Real-time streaming data delivery over Named Data Networking. IEICE Transactions on Communications, E99B(5), 974–991. https://doi.org/10.1587/transcom.2015AMI0002
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