302 research outputs found

    Performance Modelling and Resource Allocation of the Emerging Network Architectures for Future Internet

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    With the rapid development of information and communications technologies, the traditional network architecture has approached to its performance limit, and thus is unable to meet the requirements of various resource-hungry applications. Significant infrastructure improvements to the network domain are urgently needed to guarantee the continuous network evolution and innovation. To address this important challenge, tremendous research efforts have been made to foster the evolution to Future Internet. Long-term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A), Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Function Virtualisation (NFV) have been proposed as the key promising network architectures for Future Internet and attract significant attentions in the network and telecom community. This research mainly focuses on the performance modelling and resource allocations of these three architectures. The major contributions are three-fold: 1) LTE-A has been proposed by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) as a promising candidate for the evolution of LTE wireless communication. One of the major features of LTE-A is the concept of Carrier Aggregation (CA). CA enables the network operators to exploit the fragmented spectrum and increase the peak transmission data rate, however, this technical innovation introduces serious unbalanced loads among in the radio resource allocation of LTE-A. To alleviate this problem, a novel QoS-aware resource allocation scheme, termed as Cross-CC User Migration (CUM) scheme, is proposed in this research to support real-time services, taking into consideration the system throughput, user fairness and QoS constraints. 2) SDN is an emerging technology towards next-generation Internet. In order to improve the performance of the SDN network, a preemption-based packet-scheduling scheme is firstly proposed in this research to improve the global fairness and reduce the packet loss rate in SDN data plane. Furthermore, in order to achieve a comprehensive and deeper understanding of the performance behaviour of SDN network, this work develops two analytical models to investigate the performance of SDN in the presence of Poisson Process and Markov Modulated Poisson Process (MMPP) respectively. 3) NFV is regarded as a disruptive technology for telecommunication service providers to reduce the Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) and Operational Expenditure (OPEX) through decoupling individual network functions from the underlying hardware devices. While NFV faces a significant challenging problem of Service-Level-Agreement (SLA) guarantee during service provisioning. In order to bridge this gap, a novel comprehensive analytical model based on stochastic network calculus is proposed in this research to investigate end-to-end performance of NFV network. The resource allocation strategies proposed in this study significantly improve the network performance in terms of packet loss probability, global allocation fairness and throughput per user in LTE-A and SDN networks; the analytical models designed in this study can accurately predict the network performances of SDN and NFV networks. Both theoretical analysis and simulation experiments are conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms and the accuracy of the designed models. In addition, the models are used as practical and cost-effective tools to pinpoint the performance bottlenecks of SDN and NFV networks under various network conditions

    Stochastic performance analysis of Network Function Virtualisation in future internet

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this recordIEEE Network Function Virtualisation (NFV) has been considered as a promising technology for future Internet to increase network flexibility, accelerate service innovation and reduce the Capital Expenditures (CAPEX) and Operational Expenditures (OPEX) costs, through migrating network functions from dedicated network devices to commodity hardware. Recent studies reveal that although this migration of network function brings the network operation unprecedented flexibility and controllability, NFV-based architecture suffers from serious performance degradation compared with traditional service provisioning on dedicated devices. In order to achieve a comprehensive understanding of the service provisioning capability of NFV, this paper proposes a novel analytical model based on Stochastic Network Calculus (SNC) to quantitatively investigate the end-to-end performance bound of NFV networks. To capture the dynamic and on-demand NFV features, both the non-bursty traffic, e.g. Poisson process, and the bursty traffic, e.g. Markov Modulated Poisson Process (MMPP), are jointly considered in the developed model to characterise the arriving traffic. To address the challenges of resource competition and end-to-end NFV chaining, the property of convolution associativity and leftover service technologies of SNC are exploited to calculate the available resources of Virtual Network Function (VNF) nodes in the presence of multiple competing traffic, and transfer the complex NFV chain into an equivalent system for performance derivation and analysis. Both the numerical analysis and extensive simulation experiments are conducted to validate the accuracy of the proposed analytical model. Results demonstrate that the analytical performance metrics match well with those obtained from the simulation experiments and numerical analysis. In addition, the developed model is used as a practical and cost-effective tool to investigate the strategies of the service chain design and resource allocations in NFV networks.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    Analysis of Buffer Starvation with Application to Objective QoE Optimization of Streaming Services

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    Our purpose in this paper is to characterize buffer starvations for streaming services. The buffer is modeled as an M/M/1 queue, plus the consideration of bursty arrivals. When the buffer is empty, the service restarts after a certain amount of packets are \emph{prefetched}. With this goal, we propose two approaches to obtain the \emph{exact distribution} of the number of buffer starvations, one of which is based on \emph{Ballot theorem}, and the other uses recursive equations. The Ballot theorem approach gives an explicit result. We extend this approach to the scenario with a constant playback rate using T\`{a}kacs Ballot theorem. The recursive approach, though not offering an explicit result, can obtain the distribution of starvations with non-independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) arrival process in which an ON/OFF bursty arrival process is considered in this work. We further compute the starvation probability as a function of the amount of prefetched packets for a large number of files via a fluid analysis. Among many potential applications of starvation analysis, we show how to apply it to optimize the objective quality of experience (QoE) of media streaming, by exploiting the tradeoff between startup/rebuffering delay and starvations.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures; IEEE Infocom 201

    Performance modelling and analysis of software defined networking

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    Software Defined Networking (SDN) is an emerging architecture for the next-generation Internet, providing unprecedented network programmability to handle the explosive growth of Big Data driven by the popularisation of smart mobile devices and the pervasiveness of content-rich multimedia applications. In order to quantitatively investigate the performance characteristics of SDN networks, several research efforts from both simulation experiments and analytical modelling have been reported in the current literature. Among those studies, analytical modelling has demonstrated its superiority in terms of cost-effectiveness in the evaluation of large-scale networks. However, for analytical tractability and simplification, existing analytical models are derived based on the unrealistic assumptions that the network traffic follows the Poisson process which is suitable to model non-bursty text data and the data plane of SDN is modelled by one simplified Single Server Single Queue (SSSQ) system. Recent measurement studies have shown that, due to the features of heavy volume and high velocity, the multimedia big data generated by real-world multimedia applications reveals the bursty and correlated nature in the network transmission. With the aim of the capturing such features of realistic traffic patterns and obtaining a comprehensive and deeper understanding of the performance behaviour of SDN networks, this paper presents a new analytical model to investigate the performance of SDN in the presence of the bursty and correlated arrivals modelled by Markov Modulated Poisson Process (MMPP). The Quality-of-Service performance metrics in terms of the average latency and average network throughput of the SDN networks are derived based on the developed analytical model. To consider realistic multi-queue system of forwarding elements, a Priority-Queue (PQ) system is adopted to model SDN data plane. To address the challenging problem of obtaining the key performance metrics, e.g., queue length distribution of PQ system with a given service capacity, a versatile methodology extending the Empty Buffer Approximation (EBA) method is proposed to facilitate the decomposition of such a PQ system to two SSSQ systems. The validity of the proposed model is demonstrated through extensive simulation experiments. To illustrate its application, the developed model is then utilised to study the strategy of the network configuration and resource allocation in SDN networksThis work is supported by the EU FP7 “QUICK” Project (Grant NO. PIRSES-GA-2013-612652) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant NO. 61303241)

    Performance Analysis of Prioritized MAC in UWB WPAN With Bursty Multimedia Traffic

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    Wireless Throughput and Energy Efficiency under QoS Constraints

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    Mobile data traffic has experienced unprecedented growth recently and is predicted to grow even further over the coming years. As one of the main driving forces behind this growth, wireless transmission of multimedia content has significantly increased in volume and is expected to be the dominant traffic in data communications. Such wireless multimedia traffic requires certain quality-of-service (QoS) guarantees. With these motivations, in the first part of the thesis, throughput and energy efficiency in fading channels are studied in the presence of randomly arriving data and statistical queueing constraints. In particular, Markovian arrival models including discrete-time Markov, Markov fluid, and Markov-modulated Poisson sources are considered, and maximum average arrival rates in the presence of statistical queueing constraints are characterized. Furthermore, energy efficiency is analyzed by determining the minimum energy per bit and wideband slope in the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime. Following this analysis, energy-efficient power adaptation policies in fading channels are studied when data arrivals are modeled as Markovian processes and statistical QoS constraints are imposed. After formulating energy efficiency (EE) as maximum throughput normalized by the total power consumption, optimal power control policies that maximize EE are obtained for different source models. Next, throughput and energy efficiency of secure wireless transmission of delay sensitive data generated by random sources are investigated. A fading broadcast model in which the transmitter sends confidential and common messages to two receivers is considered. It is assumed that the common and confidential data, generated from Markovian sources, is stored in buffers prior to transmission, and the transmitter operates under constraints on buffer/delay violation probability. Under such statistical QoS constraints, the throughput is determined. In particular, secrecy capacity is used to describe the service rate of buffers containing confidential messages. Moreover, energy efficiency is studied in the low signal-to-noise (SNR) regime. In the final part of the thesis, throughput and energy efficiency are addressed considering the multiuser channel models. Five different channel models, namely, multiple access, broadcast, interference, relay and cognitive radio channels, are considered. In particular, throughput regions of multiple-access fading channels are characterized when multiple users, experiencing random data arrivals, transmit to a common receiver under statistical QoS constraints. Throughput regions of fading broadcast channels with random data arrivals in the presence of QoS requirements are studied when power control is employed at the transmitter. It is assumed that superposition coding with power control is performed at the transmitter with interference cancellation at the receivers. Optimal power control policies that maximize the weighted combination of the average arrival rates are investigated in the two-user case. Energy efficiency in two-user fading interference channels is studied when the transmitters are operating subject to QoS constraints. Specifically, energy efficiency is characterized by determining the corresponding minimum energy per bit requirements and wideband slope regions. Furthermore, transmission over a half-duplex relay channel with secrecy and QoS constraints is studied. Secrecy throughput is derived for the half duplex two-hop fading relay system operating in the presence of an eavesdropper. Fundamental limits on the energy efficiency of cognitive radio transmissions are analyzed in the presence of statistical quality of service (QoS) constraints. Minimum energy per bit and wideband slope expressions are obtained in order to identify the performance limits in terms of energy efficiency

    Transient provisioning and performance evaluation for cloud computing platforms: A capacity value approach

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    User demand on the computational resources of cloud computing platforms varies over time. These variations in demand can be predictable or unpredictable, resulting in ‘bursty’ fluctuations in demand. Furthermore, demand can arrive in batches, and users whose demands are not met can be impatient. We demonstrate how to compute the expected revenue loss over a finite time horizon in the presence of all these model characteristics through the use of matrix analytic methods. We then illustrate how to use this knowledge to make frequent short term provisioning decisions — transient provisioning. It is seen that taking each of the characteristics of fluctuating user demand (predictable, unpredictable, batchy) into account can result in a substantial reduction of losses. Moreover, our transient provisioning framework allows for a wide variety of system behaviors to be modeled and gives simple expressions for expected revenue loss which are straightforward to evaluate numerically
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