342 research outputs found

    Quality of Service over Specific Link Layers: state of the art report

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    The Integrated Services concept is proposed as an enhancement to the current Internet architecture, to provide a better Quality of Service (QoS) than that provided by the traditional Best-Effort service. The features of the Integrated Services are explained in this report. To support Integrated Services, certain requirements are posed on the underlying link layer. These requirements are studied by the Integrated Services over Specific Link Layers (ISSLL) IETF working group. The status of this ongoing research is reported in this document. To be more specific, the solutions to provide Integrated Services over ATM, IEEE 802 LAN technologies and low-bitrate links are evaluated in detail. The ISSLL working group has not yet studied the requirements, that are posed on the underlying link layer, when this link layer is wireless. Therefore, this state of the art report is extended with an identification of the requirements that are posed on the underlying wireless link, to provide differentiated Quality of Service

    Dynamic Feedback Flow Control Algorithms for Unicast and Multicast Available Bit Rate Service in Asynchronous Transfer Mode Networks

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    Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) network technology has been adopted to integrate different kinds of traffic, like video, audio and data. It provides several service categories including constant bit rate (CBR), variable bit rate (VBR), available bit rate (ABR), and unspecified bit rate (UBR) service. In particular, the ABR service has been approved to use the bandwidth left by CBR and VBR services, which is ideal for data applications and can perform well for real-time applications with the appropriate implementation. Basically ABR servIce attempts to guarantee minimum cell rate, achieve fairness, and minimise cell loss by periodically indicating to sources the rate at which to send. Therefore, there is a critical need for an effective flow control mechanism to allocate network resources (buffers, bandwidth), and provide the negotiated quality of service. This thesis develops dynamic feedback flow control schemes in ATM networks, with primary focus on point-to-point (unicast) and point-tomUltipoint (multicast) ABR algorithms. Firstly, it surveys a number of point-to-point schemes proposed for supporting unicast ABR service. Some of these algorithms do not measure the actual ABR traffic load which leads to either overestimates or underestimates of the bandwidth allocation. Others do not monitor the activity of the sources and overlook the temporarily idle sources. The rest may be implemented with additional complexity. Secondly, the research shifts to the problems of point-to-multipoint algorithms by introducing the basic concept of multicasting ABR servIce and reviewing a group of consolidation schemes, where the compromise between low consolidation nOlse and fast transient response is the main issue. Thirdly, the design and implementation issues have been addressed together with the major drawbacks of the previous schemes and hence two algorithms have been proposed. A dynamic rate-based flow control (DRFC) scheme has been developed to support ABR service in unicast environment, while an adaptive feedback consolidation (AFC) algorithm has been designed for ABR multicasting. Finally, these schemes are extensively tested and compared with others from the literature using a wide range of network configurations and different types of traffic sources. The simulation results show that the DRFC algorithm allocates the available bandwidth fairly among the contending ABR sources, while achieving high link utilisation with reasonable growth of queues. The AFC scheme eliminates the consolidation noise with fast transient response as well as minimising the effect of non-responsive branches

    Quality of Service over Specific Link Layers: state of the art report

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    SatCom Today in Canada: Significant Research: Broadband Satellite Communications List of CITR related Publications (1998-2003)

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    Journal Papers Conference Papers Contributions to Standards Canadian Space Agency Recent Publication

    IP and ATM - current evolution for integrated services

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    Current and future applications make use of different technologies as voice, data, and video. Consequently network technologies need to support them. For many years, the ATM based Broadband-ISDN has generally been regarded as the ultimate networking technology, which can integrate voice, data, and video services. With the recent tremendous growth of the Internet and the reluctant deployment of public ATM networks, the future development of ATM seems to be less clear than it used to be. In the past IP provided (and was though to provide) only best effort services, thus, despite its world wide diffution, was not considered as a network solution for multimedia application. Currently many of the IETF working groups work on areas related to integrated services, and IP is also proposing itself as networking technology for supporting voice, data, and video services. This paper give a technical overview on the competing integrated services network solutions, such as IP, ATM and the different available and emerging technologies on how to run IP over ATM, and tries to identify their potential and shortcomings

    Klausurtagung des Instituts für Telematik. Schloss Dagstuhl, 29. März bis 1. April 2000

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    Der vorliegende Bericht gibt einen Überblick über aktuelle Forschungsarbeiten des Instituts für Telematik an der Universität Karlsruhe (TH). Das Institut für Telematik ist in einem Teilgebiet der Informatik tätig, welches durch das Zusammenwachsen von Informatik und Kommunikationstechnik zur Telematik geprägt ist. Es gliedert sich in die Forschungsbereiche Telematik, Telecooperation Office (TecO), Cooperation & Management, Hochleistungsnetze und Netzwerkmanagement sowie dezentrale Systeme und Netzdienste. Die Schwerpunkte des Forschungsbereichs "Telematik" (Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. G. Krüger) liegen in den Bereichen "Dienstgüte", "Mobilkommunikation" und "Verteilte Systeme". Gemeinsames Ziel ist die Integration heterogener Netze (Festnetze und Funknetze), Rechnersysteme (von Workstations bis zu PDAs) und Softwarekomponenten, um damit den Anwendern eine Vielzahl von integrierten Diensten effizient und mit größtmöglicher Qualität zu erbringen. Das "Telecooperation Office" (TecO, Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. G. Krüger) ist ein Institutsbereich, der in Zusammenarbeit mit der Industrie anwendungsnahe Forschungsthemen der Telematik aufgreift. Im Mittelpunkt steht die innovative Nutzung von Kommunikationsinfrastrukturen mit den Schwerpunkten Softwaretechnik für Web-Anwendungen, neue Formen der Telekooperation sowie tragbare und allgegenwärtige Technologien (Ubiquitous Computing). Die Kernkompetenz des Forschungsbereichs "Cooperation & Management" (Prof. Dr. S. Abeck) liegt im prozessorientierten Netz-, System- und Anwendungsmanagement. Es werden werkzeuggestützte Managementlösungen für Betriebsprozesse entwickelt und in realen Szenarien erprobt. Ein wichtiges Szenario stellt das multimediale Informationssystem "NEXUS" dar, das als Plattform eines europaweit verteilten Lehr- und Lernsystems genutzt wird. Der Forschungsbereich "Hochleistungsnetze & Netzwerkmanagement" (Prof. Dr. W. Juling) befasst sich mit Technologie und Konzepten moderner leistungsfähiger Netzwerke sowie darüber hinaus mit sämtlichen Aspekten des Managements dieser zumeist ausgedehnten Netze. Um eine enge Abstimmung zwischen Forschungsaktivitäten und betrieblicher Praxis zu erzielen, werden insbesondere auch Synergien zwischen Institut und Rechenzentrum angestrebt. Die Arbeiten des Forschungsbereichs "Dezentrale Systeme und Netzdienste" (Prof. Dr. L. Wolf) befassen sich mit der Unterstützung verteilter Multimedia-Systeme, auch unter Berücksichtigung von Komponenten mit drahtlosem Zugang und den dafür geeigneten Architekturen und Infrastrukturen. Dabei werden vor allem Aspekte der Kommunikationssysteme wie Protokollmechanismen, Ressourcenverwaltung und adaptive und heterogene Systeme untersucht

    Design of traffic shaper / scheduler for packet switches and DiffServ networks : algorithms and architectures

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    The convergence of communications, information, commerce and computing are creating a significant demand and opportunity for multimedia and multi-class communication services. In such environments, controlling the network behavior and guaranteeing the user\u27s quality of service is required. A flexible hierarchical sorting architecture which can function either as a traffic shaper or a scheduler according to the requirement of the traffic load is presented to meet the requirement. The core structure can be implemented as a hierarchical traffic shaper which can support a large number of connections with a wide variety of rates and burstiness without the loss of the granularity in cells\u27 conforming departure time. The hierarchical traffic shaper can implement the exact sorting scheme with a substantial reduced memory size by using two stages of timing queues, and with substantial reduction in complexity, without introducing any sorting inaccuracy. By setting a suitable threshold to the length of the departure queue and using a lookahead algorithm, the core structure can be converted to a hierarchical rateadaptive scheduler. Based on the traffic load, it can work as an exact sorting traffic shaper or a Generic Cell Rate Algorithm (GCRA) scheduler. Such a rate-adaptive scheduler can reduce the Cell Transfer Delay and the Maximum Memory Occupancy greatly while keeping the fairness in the bandwidth assignment which is the inherent characteristic of GCRA. By introducing a best-effort queue to accommodate besteffort traffic, the hierarchical sorting architecture can be changed to a near workconserving scheduler. It assigns remaining bandwidth to the best-effort traffic so that it improves the utilization, of the outlink while it guarantees the quality of service requirements of those services which require quality of service guarantees. The inherent flexibility of the hierarchical sorting architecture combined with intelligent algorithms determines its multiple functions. Its implementation not only can manage buffer and bandwidth resources effectively, but also does not require no more than off-the-shelf hardware technology. The correlation of the extra shaping delay and the rate of the connections is revealed, and an improved fair traffic shaping algorithm, Departure Event Driven plus Completing Service Time Resorting algorithm, is presented. The proposed algorithm introduces a resorting process into Departure Event Driven Traffic Shaping Algorithm to resolve the contention of multiple cells which are all eligible for transmission in the traffic shaper. By using the resorting process based on each connection\u27s rate, better fairness and flexibility in the bandwidth assignment for connections with wide range of rates can be given. A Dual Level Leaky Bucket Traffic Shaper(DLLBTS) architecture is proposed to be implemented at the edge nodes of Differentiated Services Networks in order to facilitate the quality of service management process. The proposed architecture can guarantee not only the class-based Service Level Agreement, but also the fair resource sharing among flows belonging to the same class. A simplified DLLBTS architecture is also given, which can achieve the goals of DLLBTS while maintain a very low implementation complexity so that it can be implemented with the current VLSI technology. In summary, the shaping and scheduling algorithms in the high speed packet switches and DiffServ networks are studied, and the intelligent implementation schemes are proposed for them

    A Survey of Quality of Service Differentiation Mechanisms for Optical Burst Switching Networks

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    Cataloged from PDF version of article.This paper presents an overview of Quality of Service (QoS) differentiation mechanisms proposed for Optical Burst Switching (OBS) networks. OBS has been proposed to couple the benefits of both circuit and packet switching for the ‘‘on demand’’ use of capacity in the future optical Internet. In such a case, QoS support imposes some important challenges before this technology is deployed. This paper takes a broader view on QoS, including QoS differentiation not only at the burst but also at the transport levels for OBS networks. A classification of existing QoS differentiation mechanisms for OBS is given and their efficiency and complexity are comparatively discussed. We provide numerical examples on how QoS differentiation with respect to burst loss rate and transport layer throughput can be achieved in OBS networks. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    MPLS LSP Establishment for Differentiated Service and Interoperability Issues with ATM-PNNI Networks

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