13 research outputs found

    An investigation into dynamical bandwidth management and bandwidth redistribution using a pool of cooperating interfacing gateways and a packet sniffer in mobile cloud computing

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    Mobile communication devices are increasingly becoming an essential part of almost every aspect of our daily life. However, compared to conventional communication devices such as laptops, notebooks, and personal computers, mobile devices still lack in terms of resources such as processor, storage and network bandwidth. Mobile Cloud Computing is intended to augment the capabilities of mobile devices by moving selected workloads away from resource-limited mobile devices to resource-intensive servers hosted in the cloud. Services hosted in the cloud are accessed by mobile users on-demand via the Internet using standard thick or thin applications installed on their devices. Nowadays, users of mobile devices are no longer satisfied with best-effort service and demand QoS when accessing and using applications and services hosted in the cloud. The Internet was originally designed to provide best-effort delivery of data packets, with no guarantee on packet delivery. Quality of Service has been implemented successfully in provider and private networks since the Internet Engineering Task Force introduced the Integrated Services and Differentiated Services models. These models have their legacy but do not adequately address the Quality of Service needs in Mobile Cloud Computing where users are mobile, traffic differentiation is required per user, device or application, and packets are routed across several network domains which are independently administered. This study investigates QoS and bandwidth management in Mobile Cloud Computing and considers a scenario where a virtual test-bed made up of GNS3 network software emulator, Cisco IOS image, Wireshark packet sniffer, Solar-Putty, and Firefox web browser appliance is set up on a laptop virtualized with VMware Workstation 15 Pro. The virtual test-bed is in turn connected to the real world Internet via the host laptop's Ethernet Network Interface Card. Several virtual Firefox appliances are set up as endusers and generate traffic by launching web applications such as video streaming, file download and Internet browsing. The traffic generated by the end-users and bandwidth used is measured, monitored, and tracked using a Wireshark packet sniffer installed on all interfacing gateways that connect the end-users to the cloud. Each gateway aggregates the demand of connected hosts and delivers Quality of Service to connected users based on the Quality of Service policies and mechanisms embedded in the gateway. Analysis of the results shows that a packet sniffer deployed at a suitable point in the network can identify, measure and track traffic usage per user, device or application in real-time. The study has also demonstrated that when deployed in the gateway connecting users to the cloud, it provides network-wide monitoring and traffic statistics collected can be fed to other functional components of the gateway where a dynamical bandwidth management scheme can be applied to instantaneously allocate and redistribute bandwidth to target users as they roam around the network from one location to another. This approach is however limited and ensuring end-to-end Quality of Service requires mechanisms and policies to be extended across all network layers along the traffic path between the user and the cloud in order to guarantee a consistent treatment of traffic

    Resource dimensioning in a mixed traffic environment

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    An important goal of modern data networks is to support multiple applications over a single network infrastructure. The combination of data, voice, video and conference traffic, each requiring a unique Quality of Service (QoS), makes resource dimensioning a very challenging task. To guarantee QoS by mere over-provisioning of bandwidth is not viable in the long run, as network resources are expensive. The aim of proper resource dimensioning is to provide the required QoS while making optimal use of the allocated bandwidth. Dimensioning parameters used by service providers today are based on best practice recommendations, and are not necessarily optimal. This dissertation focuses on resource dimensioning for the DiffServ network architecture. Four predefined traffic classes, i.e. Real Time (RT), Interactive Business (IB), Bulk Business (BB) and General Data (GD), needed to be dimensioned in terms of bandwidth allocation and traffic regulation. To perform this task, a study was made of the DiffServ mechanism and the QoS requirements of each class. Traffic generators were required for each class to perform simulations. Our investigations show that the dominating Transport Layer protocol for the RT class is UDP, while TCP is mostly used by the other classes. This led to a separate analysis and requirement for traffic models for UDP and TCP traffic. Analysis of real-world data shows that modern network traffic is characterized by long-range dependency, self-similarity and a very bursty nature. Our evaluation of various traffic models indicates that the Multi-fractal Wavelet Model (MWM) is best for TCP due to its ability to capture long-range dependency and self-similarity. The Markov Modulated Poisson Process (MMPP) is able to model occasional long OFF-periods and burstiness present in UDP traffic. Hence, these two models were used in simulations. A test bed was implemented to evaluate performance of the four traffic classes defined in DiffServ. Traffic was sent through the test bed, while delay and loss was measured. For single class simulations, dimensioning values were obtained while conforming to the QoS specifications. Multi-class simulations investigated the effects of statistical multiplexing on the obtained values. Simulation results for various numerical provisioning factors (PF) were obtained. These factors are used to determine the link data rate as a function of the required average bandwidth and QoS. The use of class-based differentiation for QoS showed that strict delay and loss bounds can be guaranteed, even in the presence of very high (up to 90%) bandwidth utilization. Simulation results showed small deviations from best practice recommendation PF values: A value of 4 is currently used for both RT and IB classes, while 2 is used for the BB class. This dissertation indicates that 3.89 for RT, 3.81 for IB and 2.48 for BB achieve the prescribed QoS more accurately. It was concluded that either the bandwidth distribution among classes, or quality guarantees for the BB class should be adjusted since the RT and IB classes over-performed while BB under-performed. The results contribute to the process of resource dimensioning by adding value to dimensioning parameters through simulation rather than mere intuition or educated guessing.Dissertation (MEng (Electronic Engineering))--University of Pretoria, 2007.Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineeringunrestricte

    Internet QoS for DiffServ-Enabled Routers

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    Differentiated Service Model (DiffServ) is currently a popular research topic as a low-cost method to bring QoS to today's Internet backbone network. In this paper, the author introduces the techniques and methodologies that used to design and implement DiffServ-enabled (DS-enabled) routers. The adaptations of DS-enabled routers are designed to cater to the low Internet connectivity within Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS LAN. The author has implemented basic DiffServ setting using three CISC03725 routers. Based on these DiffServ-enabled routers, the author set up a small scale lab network to study DiffServ QoS features: priority dropping (discrimination among different service classes), QoS guarantees and measuring QoS using various formal metrics (delay and throughput). Furthermore, the author present problems encountered during study, and the proposed solutions

    Performance Tuning of Dual-priority Delta Networks through Queuing Scheduling Disciplines

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    Differentiated Services (DiffServ) and other scheduling strategies are now widespread in the traditional, “best effort” Internet. These Internet Architectures offer Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees for important customers at the same time as supporting less critical applications of lower priority. Strict priority queuing (PQ), weighted round robin (WRR), and class-based weighted fair queuing (CBWFQ) are three common scheduling disciplines for differentiation of services in telecommunication networks. In this paper, a comparative performance study of the above PQ, WRR and CBWFQ queuing scheduling policies applied on a double-buffered, 6-stage Multistage Interconnection Network (MIN) that natively supports a 2-class priority mechanism is presented and analyzed using simulation experiments. We also consider a 10-stage MIN, to validate that the conclusions drawn from the 6-stage MIN apply to MINs of different sizes. The findings of this paper can be used by MIN designers to optimally configure their networks

    Internet QoS for DiffServ-Enabled Routers

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    Differentiated Service Model (DiffServ) is currently a popular research topic as a low-cost method to bring QoS to today's Internet backbone network. In this paper, the author introduces the techniques and methodologies that used to design and implement DiffServ-enabled (DS-enabled) routers. The adaptations of DS-enabled routers are designed to cater to the low Internet connectivity within Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS LAN. The author has implemented basic DiffServ setting using three CISC03725 routers. Based on these DiffServ-enabled routers, the author set up a small scale lab network to study DiffServ QoS features: priority dropping (discrimination among different service classes), QoS guarantees and measuring QoS using various formal metrics (delay and throughput). Furthermore, the author present problems encountered during study, and the proposed solutions

    Internet QoS for DiffServ-Enabled Routers

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    Differentiated Service Model (DiffServ) is currently a popular research topic as a low-cost method to bring QoS to today's Internet backbone network. In this paper, the author introduces the techniques and methodologies that used to design and implement DiffServ-enabled (DS-enabled) routers. The adaptations of DS-enabled routers are designed to cater to the low Internet connectivity within Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS LAN. The author has implemented basic DiffServ setting using three CISC03725 routers. Based on these DiffServ-enabled routers, the author set up a small scale lab network to study DiffServ QoS features: priority dropping (discrimination among different service classes), QoS guarantees and measuring QoS using various formal metrics (delay and throughput). Furthermore, the author present problems encountered during study, and the proposed solutions

    Journal of Telecommunications and Information Technology, 2003, nr 2

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    An adaptive framework for end-to-end quality of service management

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Telemedicine

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    Telemedicine is a rapidly evolving field as new technologies are implemented for example for the development of wireless sensors, quality data transmission. Using the Internet applications such as counseling, clinical consultation support and home care monitoring and management are more and more realized, which improves access to high level medical care in underserved areas. The 23 chapters of this book present manifold examples of telemedicine treating both theoretical and practical foundations and application scenarios
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