384 research outputs found
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Isochronets: a High-Speed Network Switching Architecture
Traditional switching techniques need hundred- or thousand-MIPS processing power within switches to support Gbit/s transmission rates available today. These techniques anchor their decision-making on control information within transmitted frames and thus must resolve routes at the speed in which frames are being pumped into switches. Isochronets can potentially switch at any transmission rate by making switching decisions independent of frame contents. Isochronets divide network bandwidth among routing trees, a technique called Route Division Multiple Access (RDMA). Frames access network resources through the appropriate routing tree to the destination. Frame structures are irrelevant for switching decisions. Consequently, Isochronets can support multiple framing protocols without adaptation layers and are strong candidates for all-optical implementations. All network-layer functions are reduced to an admission control mechanism designed to provide quality of service (QOS) guarantees for multiple classes of traffic. The main results of this work are: (1) A new network architecture suitable for high-speed transmissions; (2) An implementation of Isochronets using cheap off-theshelf components; (3) A comparison of RDMA with more traditional switching techniques, such as Packet Switching and Circuit Switching; (4) New protocols necessary for Isochronet operations; and (5) Use of Isochronet techniques at higher layers of the protocol stack (in particular, we show how Isochronet techniques may solve routing problems in ATM networks)
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An Overview of the Isochronets Architecture for High Speed Networks
This paper overviews a novel switching architecture for high-speed networks: Isochronets. Isochronets time-divide network bandwidth among routing trees. Traffic moves down a routing tree to the root during its time band. Network functions such as routing and flow control are entirely governed by band timers and require no processing of frame headers bits. Frame motions need not be delayed for switch processing, allowing Isochronets to scale over a large spectrum of transmission speeds and support all-optical implementations. The network functions as a media-access layer that can support multiple framing protocols simultaneously, handled by higher layers at the periphery. Internetworking is reduced to a simple media-layer bridging. Isochronets provide flexible quality of service control and multicasting through allocation of bands to routing trees. They can be tuned to span a spectrum of performance behaviors outperforming both circuit or packet switching
Discrete-time priority queues with partial interference
Bibliography: p. 25."June 1984""NSF-ECS-8310698"Moshe Sidi
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Selfish Optimization in Computer Networks
This paper describes two applications of decentralized (Pareto) optimization to problems of computer communication networks. The first application is to develop a generalized principle for optimality of multi-hop broadcast channel access schemes. The second application is to decentralized flow-control in fixed virtual-circuit networks (e.g., SNA) using power maximization as the performance index. The decentralized approach to optimum network behavior yields, among other results, characterization of fair global objective functions, and optimal decentralized greedy network control algorithms. The main conclusion of this paper is that Pareto-optimality methods can be successfully used to develop optimal decentralized behavior algorithms where a centralized approach is (sometimes provably) not applicable
Two interfering queues in packet-radio networks
Bibliography: p. 14."June, 1981."U.S. Department of Defense contract No. N00014-75-C-1183M. Sidi and A. Segall
Queueing and Stability Analysis of Buffered CSMA/CD Local Networks.
This dissertation develops a joint probability generating function for the message quene lengths in a slotted p-persistent CSMA/CD (Carrier-Sense Multiple-Access with Collision Detection) system with a finite population of buffered users. Each user is assumed to have an independent and identical process of packet generation and an infinite buffer for storing outstanding packets. A closed form formula is obtained for the generating function in case of a two user system. Analytic formulas for the stability condition of a p-persistent CSMA/CD system are derived using the generating function. The range of the transmission probability p that leads to stability is examined through numerical analysis over a wide variety of the user\u27s communication demand, the packet length distribution, the number of users on the network, and the time to detect and abort collided packets
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Isochronets: A High-speed Network Switching Architecture
Traditional network architectures present two main limitations when applied to High- Speed Networks (HSNs): they do not scale with link speeds and they do not adequately support the Quality of Service (QoS) needs of high-performance applications. This thesis introduces the Isochronets architecture that overcomes both limitations. Isochronets view frame motions over links in analogy to motions on roads. In the latter, traffic lights can synchronize to create green waves of uninterrupted motion. Isochronets accomplish similar uninterrupted motion by periodically configuring network switches to create end-to-end routes in the network. Frames flow along these routes with no required header processing at intermediate switches. Isochronets offer several advantages. First, they are scaleable with respect to transmission speeds. Switches merely configure routes on a time scale that is significantly longer than and independent of the average frame transmission time. Isochronets do not require frame processing and thus avoid conversions from optical to electronic representations. They admit efficient optical transmissions under electronically controlled switches. Second, Isochronets ensure QoS for high-performance applications in terms of latency, jitter, loss, and other service qualities. Isochronet switches can give priority to frames arriving from selected links. At one extreme, they may give a source the right-of-way to the destination by assigning priority to all links in its path. Additionally, other sources may still transmit at lower priority. At the other extreme, they may give no priority to sources and frames en route to the same destination contend for intermediate links. In between, Isochronets can accomplish a myriad of priority allocations with diverse QoS. Third, Isochronets can support multiple protocols without adaptation between different frame structures. End nodes view the network as a media access layer that accepts frames of arbitrary structure. The main contributions of this thesis are: Design of the Isochronets architecture. Design and implementation of a gigabit per second Isochronet switch (Isoswitch). Definition of the Loosely-synchronous Transfer Mode (LTM) and the Synchronous Protocol Stack (SPS) that add synchronous and isochronous services to any existing protocol stack. Performance evaluation of Isochronets
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