1,404 research outputs found

    Ethernet - a survey on its fields of application

    Get PDF
    During the last decades, Ethernet progressively became the most widely used local area networking (LAN) technology. Apart from LAN installations, Ethernet became also attractive for many other fields of application, ranging from industry to avionics, telecommunication, and multimedia. The expanded application of this technology is mainly due to its significant assets like reduced cost, backward-compatibility, flexibility, and expandability. However, this new trend raises some problems concerning the services of the protocol and the requirements for each application. Therefore, specific adaptations prove essential to integrate this communication technology in each field of application. Our primary objective is to show how Ethernet has been enhanced to comply with the specific requirements of several application fields, particularly in transport, embedded and multimedia contexts. The paper first describes the common Ethernet LAN technology and highlights its main features. It reviews the most important specific Ethernet versions with respect to each application field’s requirements. Finally, we compare these different fields of application and we particularly focus on the fundamental concepts and the quality of service capabilities of each proposal

    Resource virtualisation of network routers

    Get PDF
    There is now considerable interest in applications that transport time-sensitive data across the best-effort Internet. We present a novel network router architecture, which has the potential to improve the Quality of Service guarantees provided to such flows. This router architecture makes use of virtual machine techniques, to assign an individual virtual routelet to each network flow requiring QoS guarantees. We describe a prototype of this virtual routelet architecture, and evaluate its effectiveness. Experimental results of the performance and flow partitioning of this prototype, compared with a standard software router, suggest promise in the virtual routelet architecture

    Quality of service assurance for the next generation Internet

    Get PDF
    The provisioning for multimedia applications has been of increasing interest among researchers and Internet Service Providers. Through the migration from resource-based to service-driven networks, it has become evident that the Internet model should be enhanced to provide support for a variety of differentiated services that match applications and customer requirements, and not stay limited under the flat best-effort service that is currently provided. In this paper, we describe and critically appraise the major achievements of the efforts to introduce Quality of Service (QoS) assurance and provisioning within the Internet model. We then propose a research path for the creation of a network services management architecture, through which we can move towards a QoS-enabled network environment, offering support for a variety of different services, based on traffic characteristics and user expectations

    Optical network technologies for future digital cinema

    Get PDF
    Digital technology has transformed the information flow and support infrastructure for numerous application domains, such as cellular communications. Cinematography, traditionally, a film based medium, has embraced digital technology leading to innovative transformations in its work flow. Digital cinema supports transmission of high resolution content enabled by the latest advancements in optical communications and video compression. In this paper we provide a survey of the optical network technologies for supporting this bandwidth intensive traffic class. We also highlight the significance and benefits of the state of the art in optical technologies that support the digital cinema work flow

    Network emulation focusing on QoS-Oriented satellite communication

    Get PDF
    This chapter proposes network emulation basics and a complete case study of QoS-oriented Satellite Communication

    Overlay networks for smart grids

    Get PDF

    IPTV-Oriented Network Architecture

    Full text link
    [EN] Although it emerged as a means to improve switching speed at the core network, MPLS has spread rapidly as a very !exible and robust solution for network providers to enable triple play services and reduce costs at the same time. As network complexity grows and a higher scalability is required to meet customer demands and give them the necessary Quality of Experience, more advanced features and functions must be included at the 'brains' of the network. To this end, a more automated and video delivery oriented path reservation mechanism based on RSVP-TE has been developed and tested in a lab environment with real-world ISP network equipment. We have added additional video intelligence capabilities to the network using Juniper routers and taking advantage of the JUNOS SDK for third-party developers. Finally, some measurements have been taken to validate our IPTV-oriented architecture, showing that it is possible to achieve a reasonably better bandwidth utilization by using the proposed video LSP reservation scheme.The work described in this paper was carried out with the support and network equipment of Juniper Network's Partner Solution Development Platform program.Murcia Olivares, V.; Delgado Calot, AP.; Arce Vila, P.; Guerri Cebollada, JC. (2011). IPTV-Oriented Network Architecture. Waves. 3(1):32-39. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/57651S32393
    corecore