54,910 research outputs found
MIPv6 Experimental Evaluation using Overlay Networks
The commercial deployment of Mobile IPv6 has been hastened by the concepts of Integrated
Wireless Networks and Overlay Networks, which are present in the notion of the
forthcoming generation of wireless communications. Individual wireless access networks
show limitations that can be overcome through the integration of different technologies
into a single unified platform (i.e., 4G systems). This paper summarises practical experiments
performed to evaluate the impact of inter-networking (i.e. vertical handovers) on
the Network and Transport layers. Based on our observations, we propose and evaluate a
number of inter-technology handover optimisation techniques, e.g., Router Advertisements
frequency values, Binding Update simulcasting, Router Advertisement caching, and Soft
Handovers. The paper concludes with the description of a policy-based mobility support
middleware (PROTON) that hides 4G networking complexities from mobile users, provides
informed handover-related decisions, and enables the application of different vertical
handover methods and optimisations according to context.Publicad
Don't Repeat Yourself: Seamless Execution and Analysis of Extensive Network Experiments
This paper presents MACI, the first bespoke framework for the management, the
scalable execution, and the interactive analysis of a large number of network
experiments. Driven by the desire to avoid repetitive implementation of just a
few scripts for the execution and analysis of experiments, MACI emerged as a
generic framework for network experiments that significantly increases
efficiency and ensures reproducibility. To this end, MACI incorporates and
integrates established simulators and analysis tools to foster rapid but
systematic network experiments.
We found MACI indispensable in all phases of the research and development
process of various communication systems, such as i) an extensive DASH video
streaming study, ii) the systematic development and improvement of Multipath
TCP schedulers, and iii) research on a distributed topology graph pattern
matching algorithm. With this work, we make MACI publicly available to the
research community to advance efficient and reproducible network experiments
Experiences with high definition interactive video conferencing
We review the design and implementation of UltraGrid, a new high definition video conferencing system, and present some experimental results. UltraGrid was the first system to support gigabit rate high definition interactive video conferencing on commodity systems and networks, and we present measurements to illustrate behavior of production networks subject to such real time traffic. We illustrate the benefits of hybrid IP/provisioned optical networks over best effort IP networks for this class of traffic, and motivate the development of congestion control algorithms for interactive conferencing on best effort IP networks
The QUIC Fix for Optimal Video Streaming
Within a few years of its introduction, QUIC has gained traction: a
significant chunk of traffic is now delivered over QUIC. The networking
community is actively engaged in debating the fairness, performance, and
applicability of QUIC for various use cases, but these debates are centered
around a narrow, common theme: how does the new reliable transport built on top
of UDP fare in different scenarios? Support for unreliable delivery in QUIC
remains largely unexplored.
The option for delivering content unreliably, as in a best-effort model,
deserves the QUIC designers' and community's attention. We propose extending
QUIC to support unreliable streams and present a simple approach for
implementation. We discuss a simple use case of video streaming---an
application that dominates the overall Internet traffic---that can leverage the
unreliable streams and potentially bring immense benefits to network operators
and content providers. To this end, we present a prototype implementation that,
by using both the reliable and unreliable streams in QUIC, outperforms both TCP
and QUIC in our evaluations.Comment: Published to ACM CoNEXT Workshop on the Evolution, Performance, and
Interoperability of QUIC (EPIQ
Packet reordering, high speed networks and transport protocol performance
We performed end-to-end measurements of UDP/IP flows across an Internet backbone network. Using this data, we characterized the packet reordering processes seen in the network. Our results demonstrate the high prevalence of packet reordering relative to packet loss, and show a strong correlation between packet rate and reordering on the network we studied. We conclude that, given the increased parallelism in modern networks and the demands of high performance applications, new application and protocol designs should treat packet reordering on an equal footing to packet loss, and must be robust and resilient to both in order to achieve high performance
X-TCP: A Cross Layer Approach for TCP Uplink Flows in mmWave Networks
Millimeter wave frequencies will likely be part of the fifth generation of
mobile networks and of the 3GPP New Radio (NR) standard. MmWave communication
indeed provides a very large bandwidth, thus an increased cell throughput, but
how to exploit these resources at the higher layers is still an open research
question. A very relevant issue is the high variability of the channel, caused
by the blockage from obstacles and the human body. This affects the design of
congestion control mechanisms at the transport layer, and state-of-the-art TCP
schemes such as TCP CUBIC present suboptimal performance. In this paper, we
present a cross layer approach for uplink flows that adjusts the congestion
window of TCP at the mobile equipment side using an estimation of the available
data rate at the mmWave physical layer, based on the actual resource allocation
and on the Signal to Interference plus Noise Ratio. We show that this approach
reduces the latency, avoiding to fill the buffers in the cellular stack, and
has a quicker recovery time after RTO events than several other TCP congestion
control algorithms.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for presentation at the 2017 16th Annual
Mediterranean Ad Hoc Networking Workshop (MED-HOC-NET
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