Paper at:
http://www.isa.its.tudelft.nl/~pouwelse/Bittorrent_Measurements_6pages.pdf

Of the many P2P file-sharing prototypes in existence, BitTorrent is one of
the few that has managed to attract millions of users.

Even though many P2P file-sharing systems have been proposed and
implemented, only very few have stood the test of intensive daily use by a
very large user community. The BitTorrent file-sharing system is one of
these systems. Measurements on Internet backbones indicate that BitTorrent
has evolved into one of the most popular networks [8]. In fact, BitTorrent
traffic made up 53 per cent of all P2P traffic in June 2004 [12]. As
BitTorrent is only a file-download protocol, it relies on other (global)
components, such as websites, for finding files. The most popular website
for this purpose is suprnova.org.

There are different aspects that are important for the acceptance of a P2P
system by a large user community. First, such a system should have a high
availability. Secondly, users should (almost) always receive a good version
of the content they request (no fake files) [10]. Thirdly, the system should
be able to deal with flashcrowds. Finally, users should obtain a relatively
high download speed.

In this paper we present a detailed measurement study of the combination of
BitTorrent and Suprnova. This measurements study addresses all four
aforementioned aspects. Our measurement data consist of detailed traces
gathered over a period of 8 months (Jun'03 to Mar'04) of more than two
thousand global components. In addition, for one of the most popular files
we followed all 90,155 downloading peers from the injection of the file
until its disappearance (several months). In a period of two weeks we
measured the bandwidth of 54,845 peers downloading over a hundred newly
injected files. This makes our measurement effort one of the largest ever
conducted.

The contributions of this paper are the following: first, we add to the
understanding of the operation of a P2P file-sharing system that apparently
by its user-friendliness, the quality of the content it delivers, and its
performance, has the right mechanisms to attract millions of users. Second,
the results of this paper can aid in the (mathematical) modeling of P2P
systems. For instance, in the fluid model in [13], it is assumed that the
arrival process and the abort and departure processes of downloaders are
Poisson, something that is in obvious contradiction with our measurements.
One of our main conclusions is that within P2P systems a tension exists
between availability, which is improved when there are no global components,
and data integrity, which benefits from centralization.

Paper at:
http://www.isa.its.tudelft.nl/~pouwelse/Bittorrent_Measurements_6pages.pdf



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