Open Access
Open access
Network, volume 3, issue 4, pages 502-521

Enhancing Cache Robustness in Information-Centric Networks: Per-Face Popularity Approaches

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-11-01
Journal: Network
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ISSN26738732
General Environmental Science
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Abstract

Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is a new paradigm of network architecture that focuses on content rather than hosts as first-class citizens of the network. As part of these architectures, in-network storage devices are essential to provide end users with close copies of popular content, to reduce latency and improve the overall experience for the user but also to reduce network congestion and load on the content producers. To be effective, in-network storage devices, such as content storage routers, should maintain copies of the most popular content objects. Adversaries that wish to reduce this effectiveness can launch cache pollution attacks to eliminate the benefit of the in-network storage device caches. Therefore, it is crucial to protect these devices and ensure the highest hit rate possible. This paper demonstrates Per-Face Popularity approaches to reducing the effects of cache pollution and improving hit rates by normalizing assessed popularity across all faces of content storage routers. The mechanisms that were developed prevent consumers, whether legitimate or malicious, on any single face or small number of faces from overwhelmingly influencing the content objects that remain in the cache. The results demonstrate that per-face approaches generally have much better hit rates than currently used cache replacement techniques.

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