6,543 research outputs found
Resource management in IP-based radio access networks
IP is being considered to be used in the Radio Access Network (RAN) of UMTS. It is of paramount importance to be able to provide good QoS guarantees to real time services in such an IP-based RAN. QoS in IP networks is most efficiently provided with Differentiated services (Diffserv). However, currently Diffserv mainly specifies Per Hop Behaviors (PHB). Proper mechanisms for admission control and resource reservation have not yet been defined. A new resource management concept in the IP-based RAN is needed to offer QoS guarantees to real time services. We investigate the current Diffserv mechanisms and contribute to development of a new resource management protocol. We focus on the load control algorithm [9], which is an attempt to solve the problem of admission control and resource reservation in IP-based networks. In this document we present some load control issues and propose to enhance the load control protocol with the Measurement Based Admission Control (MBAC) concept. With this enhancement the traffic load in the IP-based RAN can be estimated, since the ingress router in the network path can be notified by marking packets with the resource state information. With this knowledge, the ingress router can perform admission control to keep the IP-based RAN stable with a high utilization even in overload situations
Understanding Internet topology: principles, models, and validation
Building on a recent effort that combines a first-principles approach to modeling router-level connectivity with a more pragmatic use of statistics and graph theory, we show in this paper that for the Internet, an improved understanding of its physical infrastructure is possible by viewing the physical connectivity as an annotated graph that delivers raw connectivity and bandwidth to the upper layers in the TCP/IP protocol stack, subject to practical constraints (e.g., router technology) and economic considerations (e.g., link costs). More importantly, by relying on data from Abilene, a Tier-1 ISP, and the Rocketfuel project, we provide empirical evidence in support of the proposed approach and its consistency with networking reality. To illustrate its utility, we: 1) show that our approach provides insight into the origin of high variability in measured or inferred router-level maps; 2) demonstrate that it easily accommodates the incorporation of additional objectives of network design (e.g., robustness to router failure); and 3) discuss how it complements ongoing community efforts to reverse-engineer the Internet
Towards an incremental deployment of ERN protocols: a proposal for an E2E-ERN hybrid protocol
We propose an architecture based on a hybrid E2E-ERN approach to allow incremental deployment of ERN (Explicit Rate Notification) protocols in heterogeneous networks. The proposed IP-ERN architecture combines E2E (End-to-End)and ERN protocols and uses the minimum between both congestion windows to perform. Without introducing complex operation, the resulting E2E-ERN protocol provides inter and intra protocol fairness and benefits from all ERN protocol advantages when possible. We detail the principle of this novel IP-ERN architecture and show that this architecture is highly adaptive to the network dynamic and is compliant with IPv4, IPv6 as well as IP-in-IP tunneling solutions
Modeling Data-Plane Power Consumption of Future Internet Architectures
With current efforts to design Future Internet Architectures (FIAs), the
evaluation and comparison of different proposals is an interesting research
challenge. Previously, metrics such as bandwidth or latency have commonly been
used to compare FIAs to IP networks. We suggest the use of power consumption as
a metric to compare FIAs. While low power consumption is an important goal in
its own right (as lower energy use translates to smaller environmental impact
as well as lower operating costs), power consumption can also serve as a proxy
for other metrics such as bandwidth and processor load.
Lacking power consumption statistics about either commodity FIA routers or
widely deployed FIA testbeds, we propose models for power consumption of FIA
routers. Based on our models, we simulate scenarios for measuring power
consumption of content delivery in different FIAs. Specifically, we address two
questions: 1) which of the proposed FIA candidates achieves the lowest energy
footprint; and 2) which set of design choices yields a power-efficient network
architecture? Although the lack of real-world data makes numerous assumptions
necessary for our analysis, we explore the uncertainty of our calculations
through sensitivity analysis of input parameters
Multistage Switching Architectures for Software Routers
Software routers based on personal computer (PC) architectures are becoming an important alternative to proprietary and expensive network devices. However, software routers suffer from many limitations of the PC architecture, including, among others, limited bus and central processing unit (CPU) bandwidth, high memory access latency, limited scalability in terms of number of network interface cards, and lack of resilience mechanisms. Multistage PC-based architectures can be an interesting alternative since they permit us to i) increase the performance of single software routers, ii) scale router size, iii) distribute packet manipulation and control functionality, iv) recover from single-component failures, and v) incrementally upgrade router performance. We propose a specific multistage architecture, exploiting PC-based routers as switching elements, to build a high-speed, largesize,scalable, and reliable software router. A small-scale prototype of the multistage router is currently up and running in our labs, and performance evaluation is under wa
The Dynamics of Internet Traffic: Self-Similarity, Self-Organization, and Complex Phenomena
The Internet is the most complex system ever created in human history.
Therefore, its dynamics and traffic unsurprisingly take on a rich variety of
complex dynamics, self-organization, and other phenomena that have been
researched for years. This paper is a review of the complex dynamics of
Internet traffic. Departing from normal treatises, we will take a view from
both the network engineering and physics perspectives showing the strengths and
weaknesses as well as insights of both. In addition, many less covered
phenomena such as traffic oscillations, large-scale effects of worm traffic,
and comparisons of the Internet and biological models will be covered.Comment: 63 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables, submitted to Advances in Complex
System
Passport: Enabling Accurate Country-Level Router Geolocation using Inaccurate Sources
When does Internet traffic cross international borders? This question has
major geopolitical, legal and social implications and is surprisingly difficult
to answer. A critical stumbling block is a dearth of tools that accurately map
routers traversed by Internet traffic to the countries in which they are
located. This paper presents Passport: a new approach for efficient, accurate
country-level router geolocation and a system that implements it. Passport
provides location predictions with limited active measurements, using machine
learning to combine information from IP geolocation databases, router
hostnames, whois records, and ping measurements. We show that Passport
substantially outperforms existing techniques, and identify cases where paths
traverse countries with implications for security, privacy, and performance
Passport: enabling accurate country-level router geolocation using inaccurate sources
When does Internet traffic cross international borders? This question has major geopolitical, legal and social implications and is surprisingly difficult to answer. A critical stumbling block is a dearth of tools that accurately map routers traversed by Internet traffic to the countries in which they are located. This paper presents Passport: a new approach for efficient, accurate country-level router geolocation and a system that implements it. Passport provides location predictions with limited active measurements, using machine learning to combine information from IP geolocation databases, router hostnames, whois records, and ping measurements. We show that Passport substantially outperforms existing techniques, and identify cases where paths traverse countries with implications for security, privacy, and performance.First author draf
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