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World Wide Web Cache Consistency

James Gwertzman and Margo Seltzer, Harvard University

The bandwidth demands of the World Wide Web continue to grow at a hyper-exponential rate. Given this rocketing growth, caching of web objects as a means to reduce network bandwidth consumption is likely to be a necessity in the very near future. Unfortunately, many Web caches do not satisfactorily maintain cache consistency. This paper presents a survey of contem- porary cache consistency mechanisms in use on the Internet today and examines recent research in Web cache consistency. Using trace-driven simulation, we show that a weak cache consistency protocol (the one used in the Alex ftp cache) reduces network bandwidth consumption and server load more than either time-to-live fields or an invalidation protocol and can be tuned to return stale data less than 5% of the time.

James Gwertzman, Harvard University

Margo Seltzer, Harvard University

BibTeX
@inproceedings {260516,
author = {James Gwertzman and Margo Seltzer},
title = {World Wide Web Cache Consistency},
booktitle = {USENIX 1996 Annual Technical Conference (USENIX ATC 96)},
year = {1996},
address = {San Diego, CA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenix-1996-annual-technical-conference/world-wide-web-cache-consistency},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = jan
}
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Links

Paper: 
http://usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/sd96/full_papers/seltzer.ps
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