8,894 research outputs found

    Evaluating the Performance of TCP Stacks for High-Speed Networks.

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    In this paper we present experimental results evaluating the performance of the Scalable-TCP, HS-TCP, BICTCP, FAST-TCP and H-TCP proposals for changes to the TCP congestion control algorithm to improve performance in highspeed network paths

    Evaluating the Performance of TCP Stacks for High-Speed Networks.

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    In this paper we present experimental results evaluating the performance of the Scalable-TCP, HS-TCP, BICTCP, FAST-TCP and H-TCP proposals for changes to the TCP congestion control algorithm to improve performance in highspeed network paths

    Throughput analysis of Scalable TCP congestion control

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    Scalable TCP (STCP) has been proposed a congestion control algorithm for high speed networks. We present a mathematical analysis of STCP´s congestion window through the slow start and the congestion avoidance phases. We analyse the evolution of congestion windows for single and multiple flows and for DropTail queues with and without random loss. We derive throughput formulas for the different setups and reveal the inherent unfairness between different round trip times flows. Our mathematical analysis is compared to state-of-the-art network simulator (ns) results, which verifies our model´s accuracy. With our analysis we want to adaptively control STCP´s fixed parameters in order to overcome the fairness problems. These experiments are work in progress and will be presented in a sequel paper

    Scalable laws for stable network congestion control

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    Discusses flow control in networks, in which sources control their rates based on feedback signals received from the network links, a feature present in current TCP protocols. We develop a congestion control system which is arbitrarily scalable, in the sense that its stability is maintained for arbitrary network topologies and arbitrary amounts of delay. Such a system can be implemented in a decentralized way with information currently available in networks plus a small amount of additional signaling

    TCon: A transparent congestion control deployment platform for optimizing WAN transfers

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    Nowadays, many web services (e.g., cloud storage) are deployed inside datacenters and may trigger transfers to clients through WAN. TCP congestion control is a vital component for improving the performance (e.g., latency) of these services. Considering complex networking environment, the default congestion control algorithms on servers may not always be the most efficient, and new advanced algorithms will be proposed. However, adjusting congestion control algorithm usually requires modification of TCP stacks of servers, which is difficult if not impossible, especially considering different operating systems and configurations on servers. In this paper, we propose TCon, a light-weight, flexible and scalable platform that allows administrators (or operators) to deploy any appropriate congestion control algorithms transparently without making any changes to TCP stacks of servers. We have implemented TCon in Open vSwitch (OVS) and conducted extensive test-bed experiments by transparently deploying BBR congestion control algorithm over TCon. Test-bed results show that the BBR over TCon works effectively and the performance stays close to its native implementation on servers, reducing latency by 12.76% on average

    An Improved Link Model for Window Flow Control and Its Application to FAST TCP

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    This paper presents a link model which captures the queue dynamics in response to a change in a transmission control protocol (TCP) source's congestion window. By considering both self-clocking and the link integrator effect, the model generalizes existing models and is shown to be more accurate by both open loop and closed loop packet level simulations. It reduces to the known static link model when flows' round trip delays are identical, and approximates the standard integrator link model when there is significant cross traffic. We apply this model to the stability analysis of fast active queue management scalable TCP (FAST TCP) including its filter dynamics. Under this model, the FAST control law is linearly stable for a single bottleneck link with an arbitrary distribution of round trip delays. This result resolves the notable discrepancy between empirical observations and previous theoretical predictions. The analysis highlights the critical role of self-clocking in TCP stability, and the proof technique is new and less conservative than existing ones
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