305 research outputs found

    RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Feedback for Congestion Control

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    An effective RTP congestion control algorithm requires more fine-grained feedback on packet loss, timing, and Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) marks than is provided by the standard RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Sender Report (SR) and Receiver Report (RR) packets. This document describes an RTCP feedback message intended to enable congestion control for interactive real-time traffic using RTP. The feedback message is designed for use with a sender-based congestion control algorithm, in which the receiver of an RTP flow sends back to the sender RTCP feedback packets containing the information the sender needs to perform congestion control

    User-Centric Quality of Service Provisioning in IP Networks

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    The Internet has become the preferred transport medium for almost every type of communication, continuing to grow, both in terms of the number of users and delivered services. Efforts have been made to ensure that time sensitive applications receive sufficient resources and subsequently receive an acceptable Quality of Service (QoS). However, typical Internet users no longer use a single service at a given point in time, as they are instead engaged in a multimedia-rich experience, comprising of many different concurrent services. Given the scalability problems raised by the diversity of the users and traffic, in conjunction with their increasing expectations, the task of QoS provisioning can no longer be approached from the perspective of providing priority to specific traffic types over coexisting services; either through explicit resource reservation, or traffic classification using static policies, as is the case with the current approach to QoS provisioning, Differentiated Services (Diffserv). This current use of static resource allocation and traffic shaping methods reveals a distinct lack of synergy between current QoS practices and user activities, thus highlighting a need for a QoS solution reflecting the user services. The aim of this thesis is to investigate and propose a novel QoS architecture, which considers the activities of the user and manages resources from a user-centric perspective. The research begins with a comprehensive examination of existing QoS technologies and mechanisms, arguing that current QoS practises are too static in their configuration and typically give priority to specific individual services rather than considering the user experience. The analysis also reveals the potential threat that unresponsive application traffic presents to coexisting Internet services and QoS efforts, and introduces the requirement for a balance between application QoS and fairness. This thesis proposes a novel architecture, the Congestion Aware Packet Scheduler (CAPS), which manages and controls traffic at the point of service aggregation, in order to optimise the overall QoS of the user experience. The CAPS architecture, in contrast to traditional QoS alternatives, places no predetermined precedence on a specific traffic; instead, it adapts QoS policies to each individual’s Internet traffic profile and dynamically controls the ratio of user services to maintain an optimised QoS experience. The rationale behind this approach was to enable a QoS optimised experience to each Internet user and not just those using preferred services. Furthermore, unresponsive bandwidth intensive applications, such as Peer-to-Peer, are managed fairly while minimising their impact on coexisting services. The CAPS architecture has been validated through extensive simulations with the topologies used replicating the complexity and scale of real-network ISP infrastructures. The results show that for a number of different user-traffic profiles, the proposed approach achieves an improved aggregate QoS for each user when compared with Best effort Internet, Traditional Diffserv and Weighted-RED configurations. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that the proposed architecture not only provides an optimised QoS to the user, irrespective of their traffic profile, but through the avoidance of static resource allocation, can adapt with the Internet user as their use of services change.France Teleco

    Reducing Internet Latency : A Survey of Techniques and their Merit

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    Bob Briscoe, Anna Brunstrom, Andreas Petlund, David Hayes, David Ros, Ing-Jyh Tsang, Stein Gjessing, Gorry Fairhurst, Carsten Griwodz, Michael WelzlPeer reviewedPreprin

    Protocols and Algorithms for Adaptive Multimedia Systems

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    The deployment of WebRTC and telepresence systems is going to start a wide-scale adoption of high quality real-time communication. Delivering high quality video usually corresponds to an increase in required network capacity and also requires an assurance of network stability. A real-time multimedia application that uses the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) over UDP needs to implement congestion control since UDP does not implement any such mechanism. This thesis is about enabling congestion control for real-time communication, and deploying it on the public Internet containing a mixture of wired and wireless links. A congestion control algorithm relies on congestion cues, such as RTT and loss. Hence, in this thesis, we first propose a framework for classifying congestion cues. We classify the congestion cues as a combination of: where they are measured or observed? And, how is the sending endpoint notified? For each there are two options, i.e., the cues are either observed and reported by an in-path or by an off-path source, and, the cue is either reported in-band or out-of-band, which results in four combinations. Hence, the framework provides options to look at congestion cues beyond those reported by the receiver. We propose a sender-driven, a receiver-driven and a hybrid congestion control algorithm. The hybrid algorithm relies on both the sender and receiver co-operating to perform congestion control. Lastly, we compare the performance of these different algorithms. We also explore the idea of using capacity notifications from middleboxes (e.g., 3G/LTE base stations) along the path as cues for a congestion control algorithm. Further, we look at the interaction between error-resilience mechanisms and show that FEC can be used in a congestion control algorithm for probing for additional capacity. We propose Multipath RTP (MPRTP), an extension to RTP, which uses multiple paths for either aggregating capacity or for increasing error-resilience. We show that our proposed scheduling algorithm works in diverse scenarios (e.g., 3G and WLAN, 3G and 3G, etc.) with paths with varying latencies. Lastly, we propose a network coverage map service (NCMS), which aggregates throughput measurements from mobile users consuming multimedia services. The NCMS sends notifications to its subscribers about the upcoming network conditions, which take these notifications into account when performing congestion control. In order to test and refine the ideas presented in this thesis, we have implemented most of them in proof-of-concept prototypes, and conducted experiments and simulations to validate our assumptions and gain new insights.

    Best effort measurement based congestion control

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    Abstract available: p.

    Rate-control for conversational H.264 video communication in heterogeneous networks

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    The transmission bit rate available along a communication path in a heterogeneous network is highly variable. The wireless link quality may vary due to interference and fading phenomena and, peered with radio layer reconfiguration and link layer protection mechanisms, lead to varying error rates, latencies, and, most importantly, changes in the available bit rate. And in both fixed and wireless networks, varying amounts of cross traffic from other nodes (i.e., the total offered load on the individual links of a network path) may lead to fluctuations in queue size (reflected again in a path latency) and to congestion (reflected in packet drops from router quenes). Senders have to adapt dynamically to these network conditions and adjust their sending rate and possibly other transmission parameters (such as encoding or redundancy) to match the available bit rate while maximizing the media quality perceived at the receiver. We investigate congestion indicators and their characteristics in different multimedia environments. Taking these characteristics into account, we propose a rate-adaptation algorithm that works in the following environments: a) Mobile-Mobile, b) Internet-Internet and c) Heterogeneous, Mobile-Internet scenarios. Using metrics such as Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR), loss rate, bandwidth utilization and fairness, we compare the algorithm with other rate-control algorithms for conversational video communication

    Enhanced transport protocols

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    The book presents mechanisms, protocols, and system architectures to achieve end-to-end Quality-of-Service (QoS) over heterogeneous wired/wireless networks in the Internet. Particular focus is on measurement techniques, traffic engineering mechanisms and protocols, signalling protocols as well as transport protocol extensions to support fairness and QoS. It shows how those mechanisms and protocols can be combined into a comprehensive end-to-end QoS architecture to support QoS in the Internet over heterogeneous wired/wireless access networks. Finally, techniques for evaluation of QoS mechanisms such as simulation and emulation are presented. The book is aimed at graduate and post-graduate students in Computer Science or Electrical Engineering with focus in data communications and networking as well as for professionals working in this area
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