Efficient Search in Structured Peer-to-Peer Systems: Binary v.s. K-Ary Unbalanced Tree Structures

We investigate the search cost in terms of number of messages generated for routing queries in tree-based P2P structured systems including binary and k-ary tree structures with different arities and different degrees of imbalance in the tree shape. This work is motivated by the fact that k-ary balanced tree access structures can greatly reduce the number of hops for searching compared to the binary trees. We study to what extent the same fact is true when the tree-like structures for access in P2P environments are unbalanced. Another important issue related to P2P environments is how to build these structures in a self-organizing way. We propose a mechanism for constructing k-ary tree based decentralized access structure in a self-organizing way and based on local interactions only. The ability to search efficiently also on unbalanced k-ary trees opens interesting opportunities for load balancing as has been shown in earlier work on P-Grid, our approach to structured P2P systems.