Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4957831 Vehicular Communications 2017 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
In this work, we exploit a real-world, large-scale trace coming from the users of the We-Fi app in order to (i) understand how significant the contribution of vehicular users is to the global traffic demand; (ii) compare the performance of different caching architectures; and (iii) studying how such a performance is influenced by recommendation systems and content locality. We express the price of “fog computing” through a metric called price-of-fog, accounting for the extra caches to deploy compared to a traditional, centralized approach. We find that “fog computing” allows a very significant reduction of the load on the core network, and the price thereof is low in all cases and becomes negligible if content demand is location specific. We can therefore conclude that vehicular networks make an excellent case for the transition to mobile-edge caching: thanks to the peculiar features of vehicular demand, we can obtain all the benefits of “fog computing”, including a reduction of the load on the core network - reducing the disadvantages to a minimum.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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