1,074 research outputs found

    TCP throughput guarantee in the DiffServ Assured Forwarding service: what about the results?

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    Since the proposition of Quality of Service architectures by the IETF, the interaction between TCP and the QoS services has been intensively studied. This paper proposes to look forward to the results obtained in terms of TCP throughput guarantee in the DiffServ Assured Forwarding (DiffServ/AF) service and to present an overview of the different proposals to solve the problem. It has been demonstrated that the standardized IETF DiffServ conditioners such as the token bucket color marker and the time sliding window color maker were not good TCP traffic descriptors. Starting with this point, several propositions have been made and most of them presents new marking schemes in order to replace or improve the traditional token bucket color marker. The main problem is that TCP congestion control is not designed to work with the AF service. Indeed, both mechanisms are antagonists. TCP has the property to share in a fair manner the bottleneck bandwidth between flows while DiffServ network provides a level of service controllable and predictable. In this paper, we build a classification of all the propositions made during these last years and compare them. As a result, we will see that these conditioning schemes can be separated in three sets of action level and that the conditioning at the network edge level is the most accepted one. We conclude that the problem is still unsolved and that TCP, conditioned or not conditioned, remains inappropriate to the DiffServ/AF service

    GTFRC, a TCP friendly QoS-aware rate control for diffserv assured service

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    This study addresses the end-to-end congestion control support over the DiffServ Assured Forwarding (AF) class. The resulting Assured Service (AS) provides a minimum level of throughput guarantee. In this context, this article describes a new end-to-end mechanism for continuous transfer based on TCP-Friendly Rate Control (TFRC). The proposed approach modifies TFRC to take into account the QoS negotiated. This mechanism, named gTFRC, is able to reach the minimum throughput guarantee whatever the flow’s RTT and target rate. Simulation measurements and implementation over a real QoS testbed demonstrate the efficiency of this mechanism either in over-provisioned or exactly-provisioned network. In addition, we show that the gTFRC mechanism can be used in the same DiffServ/AF class with TCP or TFRC flows

    gTFRC: a QoS-aware congestion control algorithm

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    This study addresses the end-to-end congestion control support over the DiffServ Assured Forwarding (AF) class. The resulting Assured Service (AS) provides a minimum level of throughput guarantee. In this context, this paper describes a new end-to-end mechanism for continuous transfer based on TCP-Friendly Rate Control (TFRC) originally proposed in [11]. The proposed approach modifies TFRC to take into account the QoS negotiated. This mechanism, named gTFRC, is able to reach the minimum throughput guarantee whatever the flow's RTT and target rate. Simulation measurements show the efficiency of this mechanism either in over-provisioned or exactly-provisioned network. In addition, we show that the gTFRC mechanism can be used in the same DiffServ/AF class with TCP or TFRC flows

    Performance evaluation of multicast networks and service differentiation mechanisms in IP networks

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    The performance of a communication network depends on how well the network is designed in terms of delivering the level of service required by a given type of traffic. The field of teletraffic theory is concerned with quantifying the three-way relationship between the network, its level of service and the traffic arriving at the network. In this thesis, we study three different problems concerning this three-way relationship and present models to assist in designing and dimensioning networks to satisfy the different quality of service demands. In the first part of the thesis, we consider service differentiation mechanisms in packet-switched IP networks implementing a Differentiated Services (DiffServ) architecture. We study how bandwidth can be divided in a weighted fair manner between persistent elastic TCP flows, and between these TCP flows and streaming real-time UDP flows. To this end, we model the traffic conditioning and scheduling mechanisms on the packet and the flow level. We also model the interaction of these DiffServ mechanisms with the TCP congestion control mechanism and present closed-loop models for the sending rate of a TCP flow that reacts to congestion signals from the network. In the second part, we concentrate on non-persistent elastic TCP traffic in IP networks and study how flows can be differentiated in terms of mean delay by giving priority to flows based on their age. We study Multi Level Processor Sharing (MLPS) disciplines, where jobs are classified into levels based on their age or attained service. Between levels, a strict priority discipline is applied; the level containing the youngest jobs has the highest priority. Inside a particular level, any scheduling discipline could be used. We present an implementation proposal of a two-level discipline, PS+PS, with the Processor Sharing discipline used inside both levels. We prove that, as long as the hazard rate of the job-size distribution is decreasing, which is the case for Internet traffic, PS+PS, and any MLPS discipline that favors young jobs, is better than PS with respect to overall mean delay. In the final part, we study distribution-type streaming traffic in a multicast network, where there is, at most, one copy of each channel transmission in each network link, and quantify the blocking probability. We derive an exact blocking probability algorithm for multicast traffic in a tree network based on the convolution and truncation algorithm for unicast traffic. We present a new convolution operation, the OR-convolution, to suit the transmission principle of multicast traffic, and a new truncation operator to take into account the case of having both unicast and multicast traffic in the network. We also consider different user models derived from the single-user model.reviewe

    Dynamic bandwidth allocation in multi-class IP networks using utility functions.

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    PhDAbstact not availableFujitsu Telecommunications Europe Lt

    Network emulation focusing on QoS-Oriented satellite communication

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

    Theories and Models for Internet Quality of Service

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    We survey recent advances in theories and models for Internet Quality of Service (QoS). We start with the theory of network calculus, which lays the foundation for support of deterministic performance guarantees in networks, and illustrate its applications to integrated services, differentiated services, and streaming media playback delays. We also present mechanisms and architecture for scalable support of guaranteed services in the Internet, based on the concept of a stateless core. Methods for scalable control operations are also briefly discussed. We then turn our attention to statistical performance guarantees, and describe several new probabilistic results that can be used for a statistical dimensioning of differentiated services. Lastly, we review recent proposals and results in supporting performance guarantees in a best effort context. These include models for elastic throughput guarantees based on TCP performance modeling, techniques for some quality of service differentiation without access control, and methods that allow an application to control the performance it receives, in the absence of network support

    Advances in Internet Quality of Service

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    We describe recent advances in theories and architecture that support performance guarantees needed for quality of service networks. We start with deterministic computations and give applications to integrated services, differentiated services, and playback delays. We review the methods used for obtaining a scalable integrated services support, based on the concept of a stateless core. New probabilistic results that can be used for a statistical dimensioning of differentiated services are explained; some are based on classical queuing theory, while others capitalize on the deterministic results. Then we discuss performance guarantees in a best effort context; we review: methods to provide some quality of service in a pure best effort environment; methods to provide some quality of service differentiation without access control, and methods that allow an application to control the performance it receives, in the absence of network support

    Performance of TCP with multiple Priority Classes

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    We consider the dimensioning problem for Internet access links carrying TCP traffic with two priority classes. To this end, we study the behaviour of TCP at the flow level described by a multiple-server Processor Sharing (PS) queueing model with two customer classes, where the customers represent flows generated by downloading Internet objects; the sojourn times represent the object transfer times. We present closed-form expressions for the mean sojourn times for high-priority customers and approximate expressions for the mean sojourn times of low-priority customers. The accuracy of the model is demonstrated by comparing results based on the PS model with "real" TCP simulation results obtained by the well-known Network Simulator. The experimental results demonstrate that the model-based results are highly accurate when the mean object size is at least 10 IP-packets, and the loss rate is negligible
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