102 research outputs found
Interaction between MPI and TCP in grids.
As MPI applications are more and more resource consuming, they need to be executed on grids. The communications on the WAN interconnecting clusters mostly use TCP which suffers from WAN features: high latency, sharing between users, bandwidth smaller than the aggregate bandwidth of the nodes. In this report, we first study the interaction between MPI and TCP on grids. We show why the nature of MPI traffic raises problems while using TCP on WAN links. TCP's loss detection and congestion control mechanism can both slow down the application. Then, we propose MPI5000, a transparent applicative layer between MPI and TCP, using proxies to improve the execution of MPI applications on a grid. Proxies aim at splitting TCP connections in order to detect losses faster and avoid to return in a slowstart phase after an idle time. Finally, we test our layer on Grid'5000, the French research grid, using MPICH2. The results on the NPB (NAS Parallel Benchmarks) validate our architecture that reduces the number of idle timeout and the number of long-distance retransmissions for certain benchmarks, namely BT, SP and LU benchmarks. Using MPI5000, these applications can decrease their execution time by 35%, 28%, and, 15% respectively
Satellite-based internet: A tutorial
In a satellite-based Internet system, satellites are used to interconnect heterogeneous network segments and to provide ubiquitous direct Internet access to homes and businesses. This article presents satellite-based Internet architectures and discusses multiple access control, routing, satellite transport, and integrating satellite networks into the global Internet.published_or_final_versio
QoSatAr: a cross-layer architecture for E2E QoS provisioning over DVB-S2 broadband satellite systems
This article presents QoSatAr, a cross-layer architecture developed to provide end-to-end quality of service (QoS) guarantees for Internet protocol (IP) traffic over the Digital Video Broadcasting-Second generation (DVB-S2) satellite systems. The architecture design is based on a cross-layer optimization between the physical layer and the network layer to provide QoS provisioning based on the bandwidth availability present in the DVB-S2 satellite channel. Our design is developed at the satellite-independent layers, being in compliance with the ETSI-BSM-QoS standards. The architecture is set up inside the gateway, it includes a Re-Queuing Mechanism (RQM) to enhance the goodput of the EF and AF traffic classes and an adaptive IP scheduler to guarantee the high-priority traffic classes taking into account the channel conditions affected by rain events. One of the most important aspect of the architecture design is that QoSatAr is able to guarantee the QoS requirements for specific traffic flows considering a single parameter: the bandwidth availability which is set at the physical layer (considering adaptive code and modulation adaptation) and sent to the network layer by means of a cross-layer optimization. The architecture has been evaluated using the NS-2 simulator. In this article, we present evaluation metrics, extensive simulations results and conclusions about the performance of the proposed QoSatAr when it is evaluated over a DVB-S2 satellite scenario. The key results show that the implementation of this architecture enables to keep control of the satellite system load while guaranteeing the QoS levels for the high-priority traffic classes even when bandwidth variations due to rain events are experienced. Moreover, using the RQM mechanism the user’s quality of experience is improved while keeping lower delay and jitter values for the high-priority traffic classes. In particular, the AF goodput is enhanced around 33% over the drop tail scheme (on average)
Satellite-based internet: A tutorial
In a satellite-based Internet system, satellites are used to interconnect heterogeneous network segments and to provide ubiquitous direct Internet access to homes and businesses. This article presents satellite-based Internet architectures and discusses multiple access control, routing, satellite transport, and integrating satellite networks into the global Internet.published_or_final_versio
Toward network function virtualization for cognitive wireless mesh networks: a TCP case study
Redes VSAT con el estándar DVB-S
Actualmente las redes VSAT (Very Small Aperture Terminal) están adquiriendo una mayor importancia en las comunicaciones por satélite debido a las nuevas aplicaciones
que se están desarrollando tanto a nivel empresarial como a nivel de usuario final. El presente proyecto pretende hacer un estudio de este tipo de red para presentarla como una solución al problema de querer conectar estaciones dispersas, que por el perfil del terreno hace difícil la conexión de las mismas a través de las redes terrestres
convencionales.
Los nuevos estándares están haciendo que este tipo de redes proliferen muy deprisa ya que se consigue una mayor flexibilidad que con los estándares precedentes para
este tipo de red. En concreto, en este proyecto se ha estudiado el estándar abierto DVB-S desarrollado por el grupo de trabajo DVB por ser uno de los más aceptado
internacionalmente.
Para comprender este sistema de comunicaciones, el proyecto está estructurado en dos partes.
En la primera parte se hace una revisión de cómo han evolucionado las comunicaciones satelitales VSAT, indicando las ventajas y desventajas de su implementación y sobre todo la orientación que éstas muestran a la utilización de los estándares DVB. Posteriormente se realiza un estudio de los estándares DVB-S y DVBRCS en donde se profundiza en conceptos claves tales como el Multiplexado de Transporte MPEG-2, los mecanismos de envío de mensajes de señalización, etc.
En la segunda parte del proyecto se presta atención a la seguridad de la red, analizando los mecanismos propios que presenta el estándar DVB así como los diferentes protocolos de seguridad existentes en las capas superiores para una
protección adicional.
Para concluir el proyecto se han creado dos aplicaciones, la primera como método didáctico para comprender mejor el comportamiento de las redes VSAT con el estándar DVB-S, y una segunda aplicación con carácter comercial para la transferencia de ficheros de manera segura con características específicas, enfocada particularmente en redes VSAT, aunque siendo posible su uso en otras redes.
ABSTRACT.
Nowadays VSAT networks (Very Small Aperture Terminal) are becoming more important in satellite communications, due to several new applications that are being developed both at company level and end user level. This project aims to make a study of this type of network to present it as a solution to the problem of wanting to connect scattered stations, because the terrain profile makes difficult to connect them via conventional terrestrial networks.
New standards are making that such networks proliferate very quickly for the reason that a more flexibility than the previous standards for this type of network is achieved.
Specifically, this project has studied the open standard DVB-S developed by the DVB workgroup as one of the most internationally accepted.
To understand this communication system, this project is structured in two different parts:
On one hand, in the first part a review about how VSAT satellite communications have evolved, indicating the advantages and disadvantages of its implementation and above
all, the guidance that they show to the use of the DVB standards. Subsequently, a study of the DVB-S and DVB-RCS standards is developed, where delves into key concepts such as MPEG-2 Multiplexed Transport, mechanisms of transmission of signaling messages, etc.
On the other hand, in the second part of the project, we focus on network security, analyzing the mechanisms presented by the DVB standard and various existing security
protocols in the upper layers for an extra protection.
To complete the project two different applications have been developed: the first one as a teaching method to better understand the behavior of VSAT networks in DVB-S
standard, and the second one with a commercial basis for transferring files securely with specific features applications focused particularly in VSAT networks, although
with a possible use on other networks
On the impact of link layer retransmission schemes on TCP over 4G satellite links
We study the impact of reliability mechanisms introduced at the link layer on the performance of transport protocols in the context of 4G satellite links. Specifically, we design a software module that performs realistic analysis of the network performance, by utilizing real physical layer traces of a 4G satellite service. Based on these traces, our software module produces equivalent link layer traces, as a function of the chosen link layer reliability mechanism. We further utilize the link layer traces within the ns-2 network simulator to evaluate the impact of link layer schemes on the performance of selected Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) variants. We consider erasure coding, selective-repeat automatic request (ARQ) and hybrid-ARQ link layer mechanisms, and TCP Cubic, Compound, Hybla, New Reno and Westwood. We show that, for all target TCP variants, when the throughput of the transport protocol is close to the channel capacity, using the ARQ mechanism is most beneficial for TCP performance improvement. In conditions where the physical channel error rate is high, hybrid-ARQ results in the best performance for all TCP variants considered, with up to 22% improvements compared to other schemes
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