2,822 research outputs found
TCP over High Speed Variable Capacity Links: A Simulation Study for Bandwidth Allocation
New optical network technologies provide opportunities for fast, controllable bandwidth management. These technologies can now explicitly provide resources to data paths, creating demand driven bandwidth reservation across networks where an applications bandwidth needs can be meet almost exactly. Dynamic synchronous Transfer Mode (DTM) is a gigabit network technology that provides channels with dynamically adjustable capacity. TCP is a reliable end-to-end transport protocol that adapts its rate to the available capacity. Both TCP and the DTM bandwidth can react to changes in the network load, creating a complex system with inter-dependent feedback mechanisms. The contribution of this work is an assessment of a bandwidth allocation scheme for TCP flows on variable capacity technologies. We have created a simulation environment using ns-2 and our results indicate that the allocation of bandwidth maximises TCP throughput for most flows, thus saving valuable capacity when compared to a scheme such as link over-provisioning. We highlight one situation where the allocation scheme might have some deficiencies against the static reservation of resources, and describe its causes. This type of situation warrants further investigation to understand how the algorithm can be modified to achieve performance similar to that of the fixed bandwidth case
DTMsim - DTM channel simulation in ns
Dynamic Transfer Mode (DTM) is a ring based MAN technology that
provides a channel abstraction with a dynamically adjustable capacity.
TCP is a reliable end to end transport protocol capable of adjusting
its rate. The primary goal of this work is investigate the coupling
of dynamically allocating bandwidth to TCP flows with the affect this
has on the congestion control mechanism of TCP. In particular we
wanted to find scenerios where this scheme does not work, where either
all the link capacity is allocated to TCP or congestion collapse
occurs and no capacity is allocated to TCP. We have created a
simulation environment using ns-2 to investigate TCP over networks
which have a variable capacity link. We begin with a single TCP Tahoe
flow over a fixed bandwidth link and progressively add more complexity
to understand the behaviour of dynamically adjusting link capacity to
TCP and vice versa
Datacenter Traffic Control: Understanding Techniques and Trade-offs
Datacenters provide cost-effective and flexible access to scalable compute
and storage resources necessary for today's cloud computing needs. A typical
datacenter is made up of thousands of servers connected with a large network
and usually managed by one operator. To provide quality access to the variety
of applications and services hosted on datacenters and maximize performance, it
deems necessary to use datacenter networks effectively and efficiently.
Datacenter traffic is often a mix of several classes with different priorities
and requirements. This includes user-generated interactive traffic, traffic
with deadlines, and long-running traffic. To this end, custom transport
protocols and traffic management techniques have been developed to improve
datacenter network performance.
In this tutorial paper, we review the general architecture of datacenter
networks, various topologies proposed for them, their traffic properties,
general traffic control challenges in datacenters and general traffic control
objectives. The purpose of this paper is to bring out the important
characteristics of traffic control in datacenters and not to survey all
existing solutions (as it is virtually impossible due to massive body of
existing research). We hope to provide readers with a wide range of options and
factors while considering a variety of traffic control mechanisms. We discuss
various characteristics of datacenter traffic control including management
schemes, transmission control, traffic shaping, prioritization, load balancing,
multipathing, and traffic scheduling. Next, we point to several open challenges
as well as new and interesting networking paradigms. At the end of this paper,
we briefly review inter-datacenter networks that connect geographically
dispersed datacenters which have been receiving increasing attention recently
and pose interesting and novel research problems.Comment: Accepted for Publication in IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorial
TCP-Aware Backpressure Routing and Scheduling
In this work, we explore the performance of backpressure routing and
scheduling for TCP flows over wireless networks. TCP and backpressure are not
compatible due to a mismatch between the congestion control mechanism of TCP
and the queue size based routing and scheduling of the backpressure framework.
We propose a TCP-aware backpressure routing and scheduling that takes into
account the behavior of TCP flows. TCP-aware backpressure (i) provides
throughput optimality guarantees in the Lyapunov optimization framework, (ii)
gracefully combines TCP and backpressure without making any changes to the TCP
protocol, (iii) improves the throughput of TCP flows significantly, and (iv)
provides fairness across competing TCP flows
FAST TCP: Motivation, Architecture, Algorithms, Performance
We describe FAST TCP, a new TCP congestion control algorithm for high-speed long-latency networks, from design to implementation. We highlight the approach taken by FAST TCP to address the four difficulties which the current TCP implementation has at large windows. We describe the architecture and summarize some of the algorithms implemented in our prototype. We characterize its equilibrium and stability properties. We evaluate it experimentally in terms of throughput, fairness, stability, and responsiveness
ABC: A Simple Explicit Congestion Controller for Wireless Networks
We propose Accel-Brake Control (ABC), a simple and deployable explicit
congestion control protocol for network paths with time-varying wireless links.
ABC routers mark each packet with an "accelerate" or "brake", which causes
senders to slightly increase or decrease their congestion windows. Routers use
this feedback to quickly guide senders towards a desired target rate. ABC
requires no changes to header formats or user devices, but achieves better
performance than XCP. ABC is also incrementally deployable; it operates
correctly when the bottleneck is a non-ABC router, and can coexist with non-ABC
traffic sharing the same bottleneck link. We evaluate ABC using a Wi-Fi
implementation and trace-driven emulation of cellular links. ABC achieves
30-40% higher throughput than Cubic+Codel for similar delays, and 2.2X lower
delays than BBR on a Wi-Fi path. On cellular network paths, ABC achieves 50%
higher throughput than Cubic+Codel
- …