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<b>URL:</b>
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<a href="http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/papers/vivaldi:sigcomm/paper.pdf">http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/papers/vivaldi:sigcomm/paper.pdf</a>
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<b>Entry Date:</b>
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2010-10-22


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<b>Abstract :</b>
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Large-scale Internet applications can benefit from an ability to predict round-trip times to other hosts without having to
contact them first. Explicit measurements are often unattractive because the cost of measurement can outweigh the benefits of
exploiting proximity information. Vivaldi is a simple, light-weight algorithm that assigns synthetic coordinates to hosts
such that the distance between the coordinates of two hosts accurately predicts the communication latency between the hosts.

Vivaldi is fully distributed, requiring no fixed network infrastructure and no distinguished hosts. It is also efficient: a
vnew host can compute good coordinates for itself after collecting latency information from only a few other hosts. Because it
requires little communication, Vivaldi can piggy-back on the communication patterns of the application using it and scale to
a large number of hosts.

An evaluation of Vivaldi using a simulated network whose latencies are based on measurements among 1740 Internet hosts shows
that a 2-dimensional Euclidean model with height vectors embeds these hosts with low error (the median relative error in
round-trip time prediction is 11 percent).


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