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Bidding for Storage Space in a Peer-to-Peer Data Preservation System
Vienna, Austria July 02-July 05
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICDCS.2002.102227522nd IEEE International Conference on ...
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Brian F. Cooper, Stanford University
Hector Garcia-Molina, Stanford University
Digital archives protect important data collections from failures by making multiple copies at other archives, so that there are always several good copies of a collection. In a cooperative replication network, sites "trade" space, so that each site contributes storage resources to the system and uses storage resources at other sites. Here, we examine bid trading: a mechanism where sites conduct auctions to determine who to trade with. A local site wishing to make a copy of a collection announces how much remote space is needed, and accepts bids for how much of its own space the local site must "pay" to acquire that remote space. We examine the best policies for determining when to call auctions and how much to bid, as well as the effects of "maverick" sites that attempt to subvert the bidding system. Simulations of auction and trading sessions indicate that bid trading can allowsites to achieve higher reliability than the alternative: a system where sites trade equal amounts of space without bidding.
Citation:
Brian F. Cooper, Hector Garcia-Molina, "Bidding for Storage Space in a Peer-to-Peer Data Preservation System," icdcs, pp.372, 22nd IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS'02), 2002
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