articleMay 6, 2004Closed access

Designing a super-peer network

Stanford University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

A super-peer is a node in a peer-to-peer network that operates both as a server to a set of clients, and as an equal in a network of super-peers. Super-peer networks strike a balance between the efficiency of centralized search, and the autonomy, load balancing and robustness to attacks provided by distributed search. Furthermore, they take advantage of the heterogeneity of capabilities (e.g., bandwidth, processing power) across peers, which recent studies have shown to be enormous. Hence, new and old P2P systems like KaZaA and Gnutella are adopting super-peers in their design. Despite their growing popularity, the behavior of super-peer networks is not well understood. For example, what are the potential…

Citation impact

898
total citations
FWCI
94.48
Percentile
100%
References
20
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
  • Peer-to-peer
  • Popularity
  • Distributed computing
  • Robustness (evolution)
  • Computer network
  • Distributed hash table
  • Bandwidth (computing)
No related works found for this paper.