192 research outputs found

    Enhancing wireless TCP a serialized-timer approach

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    IEEE INFOCOM Proceedings, 2010, p. 1-5In wireless networks, TCP performs unsatisfactorily since packet reordering and random losses may be falsely interpreted as congestive losses. This causes TCP to trigger fast retransmission and fast recovery spuriously, leading to under-utilization of available network resources. In this paper, we propose a novel TCP variant, known as TCP for noncongestive loss (TCP-NCL), to adapt TCP to wireless networks by using more reliable signals of packet loss and network overload for activating packet retransmission and congestion response, separately. TCP-NCL can thus serve as a unified solution for effective congestion control, sequencing control, and loss recovery. Different from the existing unified solutions, the modifications involved in the proposed variant are limited to sender-side TCP only, thereby facilitating possible future wide deployment. The two signals employed are the expirations of two serialized timers. A smart TCP sender model has been developed for optimizing the timer expiration periods. Our simulation studies reveal that TCP-NCL is robust against packet reordering as well as random packet loss while maintaining responsiveness against situations with purely congestive loss. ©2010 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    MMPTCP: a multipath transport protocol for data centers

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    Modern data centres provide large aggregate network capacity and multiple paths among servers. Traffic is very diverse; most of the data is produced by long, bandwidth hungry flows but the large majority of flows, which commonly come with strict deadlines regarding their completion time, are short. It has been shown that TCP is not efficient for any of these types of traffic in modern data centres. More recent protocols such MultiPath TCP (MPTCP) are very efficient for long flows, but are ill-suited for short flows. In this paper, we present MMPTCP, a novel transport protocol which, compared to TCP and MPTCP, reduces short flows' completion times, while providing excellent goodput to long flows. MMPTCP runs in two phases; initially, it randomly scatters packets in the network under a single congestion window exploiting all available paths. This is beneficial to latency-sensitive flows. After a specific amount of data is sent, MMPTCP switches to a regular MPTCP mode. MMPTCP is incrementally deployable in existing data centres as it does not require any modifications outside the transport layer and behaves well when competing with legacy TCP and MPTCP flows. Our extensive experimental evaluation shows that all design objectives for MMPTCP are met

    Comparative Study on the Performance of TCP-Freeze and TCP-Newreno Over Divert Failure Routing Protocol

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    Many enhancements have been proposed to address TCP throughput issues over wireless links. In this project, we will study the performance of the standard TCP over TCP Freeze with Divert Route Failure Protocol as the routing mechanism. This study is aimed for the purpose of further improvement in related services provided by TCP over the wireless links. Such enhancements are needed due to the high transmission error rates in wireless links
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