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In-Network Caching vs. Redundancy Elimination

Network-level Redundancy Elimination (RE) techniques have been proposed to reduce the amount of traffic in the Internet. and the costs of the WAN access in the Internet. RE middleboxes are usually placed in the network access gateways and strip off the repeated data from the packets. More recently, generic network-level caching architectures have been proposed as alternative to reduce the redundant data traffic in the network, presenting benefits and drawbacks compared to RE. In this paper, we compare a generic in-network caching architecture against state-of-the-art redundancy elimination (RE) solutions on real network topologies, presenting the advantages of each technique. Our results show that in-network caching architectures outperform state-of-the-art RE solutions across a wide range of traffic characteristics and parameters.

preprint2013arXivOpen access
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