• Title/Summary/Keyword: large bandwidth-delay product networks

Search Result 8, Processing Time 0.018 seconds

Enhanced TCP Congestion Control Mechanism for Networks with Large Bandwidth Delay Product (대역폭과 지연의 곱이 큰 네트워크를 위한 개선된 TCP 혼잡제어 메카니즘)

  • Park Tae-Joon;Lee Jae-Yong;Kim Byung-Chul
    • Journal of the Institute of Electronics Engineers of Korea TC
    • /
    • v.43 no.3 s.345
    • /
    • pp.126-134
    • /
    • 2006
  • Traditional TCP implementations have the under-utilization problem in large bandwidth delay product networks especially during the startup phase. In this paper, we propose a delay-based congestion control(DCC) mechanism to solve the problem. DCC is subdivided into linear and exponential growth phases. When there is no queueing delay, the congestion window grows exponentially during the congestion avoidance period. Otherwise, it maintains linear increase of congestion window similar to the legacy TCP congestion avoidance algorithm. The exponential increase phase such as the slow-start period in the legacy TCP can cause serious performance degradation by packet losses in case the buffer size is insufficient for the bandwidth-delay product, even though there is sufficient bandwidth. Thus, the DCC uses the RTT(Round Trip Time) status and the estimated queue size to prevent packet losses due to excessive transmission during the exponential growth phase. The simulation results show that the DCC algorithm significantly improves the TCP startup time and the throughput performance of TCP in large bandwidth delay product networks.

Enhanced TFRC for High Quality Video Streaming over High Bandwidth Delay Product Networks

  • Lee, Sunghee;Roh, Hyunsuk;Lee, Hyunwoo;Chung, Kwangsue
    • Journal of Communications and Networks
    • /
    • v.16 no.3
    • /
    • pp.344-354
    • /
    • 2014
  • Transmission control protocol friendly rate control (TFRC) is designed to mainly provide optimal service for unicast applications, such as multimedia streaming in the best-effort Internet environment. However, high bandwidth networks with large delays present an environment where TFRC may have a problem in utilizing the full bandwidth. TFRC inherits the slow-start mechanism of TCP Reno, but this is a time-consuming process that may require many round-trip-times (RTTs), until an appropriate sending rate is reached. Another disadvantage inherited from TCP Reno is the RTT-unfairness problem, which severely affects the performance of long-RTT flows. In this paper, we suggest enhanced TFRC for high quality video streaming over high bandwidth delay product networks. First, we propose a fast startup scheme that increases the data rate more aggressively than the slow-start, while mitigating the overshooting problem. Second, we propose a bandwidth estimation method to achieve more equitable bandwidth allocations among streaming flows that compete for the same narrow link with different RTTs. Finally, we improve the responsiveness of TFRC in the presence of severe congestion. Simulation results have shown that our proposal can achieve a fast startup and provide fairness with competing flows compared to the original TFRC.

A Novel Congestion Control Algorithm for Large BDP Networks with Wireless Links

  • Le, Tuan-Anh;Hong, Choong Seon
    • Proceedings of the Korea Information Processing Society Conference
    • /
    • 2010.11a
    • /
    • pp.1482-1484
    • /
    • 2010
  • A new TCP protocol can succeed for large bandwidth delay product when it meets network bandwidth utilization efficiency and fair sharing. We introduce a novel congestion control algorithm which employs queueing delay information in order to calculate the amount of congestion window increment in increase phase, and reduces congestion window to optimal estimated bound as packet loss occurs. Combination of such methods guarantees that the proposal utilizes fully network bandwidth, recovers quickly from packet loss in wireless link, and preserves fairness for competing flows mixed short RTT and long RTT. Our simulations show that features of the proposed TCP meet the desired requirements.

Design and Performance Evaluation of ACA-TCP to Improve Performance of Congestion Control in Broadband Networks (광대역 네트워크에서의 혼잡 제어 성능 개선을 위한 ACA-TCP 설계 및 성능 분석)

  • Na, Sang-Wan;Park, Tae-Joon;Lee, Jae-Yong;Kim, Byung-Chul
    • Journal of the Institute of Electronics Engineers of Korea TC
    • /
    • v.43 no.10 s.352
    • /
    • pp.8-17
    • /
    • 2006
  • Recently, the high-speed Internet users increase rapidly and broadband networks have been widely deployed. However, the current TCP congestion control algorithm was designed for relatively narrowband network environments, and thus its performance is inefficient for traffic transport in broadband networks. To remedy this problem, the TCP having an enhanced congestion control algorithm is required for broadband networks. In this paper, we propose an improved TCP congestion control that can sufficiently utilize the large available bandwidth in broadband networks. The proposed algorithm predicts the available bandwidth by using ACK information and RTT variation, and prevents large packet losses by adjusting congestion window size appropriately. Also, it can rapidly utilize the large available bandwidth by enhancing the legacy TCP algorithm in congestion avoidance phase. In order to evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithm, we use the ns-2 simulator. The simulation results show that the proposed algorithm improves not only the utilization of the available bandwidth but also RTT fairness and the fairness between contending TCP flows better than the HSTCP in high bandwidth delay product network environment.

Testbed Implementation and Performance Evaluation of High Speed Transport Protocols using TEIN2 Networks (TEIN2를 활용한 고대역 전송계층 프로토콜 테스트베드 구축 및 성능 분석)

  • Lee, Gi-Ra;So, Sang-Ho;Choi, Yun-Chul;Park, Man-Kyu;Lee, Jae-Yong;Kim, Byung-Chul;Kim, Dae-Young
    • Journal of the Institute of Electronics Engineers of Korea TC
    • /
    • v.46 no.2
    • /
    • pp.104-113
    • /
    • 2009
  • Recently, high-speed Internet users and broadband network infrastructure are increasing. However, the TCP protocol widely used in the Internet is an appropriate transport only for the legacy Internet, it is inefficient for traffic transport for network environments with large bandwidth-delay product. In order to remedy this problem, there have been many researches about improved congestion control algorithms for broadband networks. In these studies, most of performance evaluation has been done by simulations. In this paper, after we reviewed the proposed high bandwidth transport layer protocols, we implemented a real testbed, measured the performance and analyzed the problems of high-speed transport protocols through the international research network TEIN2 between three nations, Korea, China, and Germany.

Gallop-Vegas: An Enhanced Slow-Start Mechanism for TCP Vegas

  • Ho Cheng-Yuan;Chan Yi-Cheng;Chen Yaw-Chung
    • Journal of Communications and Networks
    • /
    • v.8 no.3
    • /
    • pp.351-359
    • /
    • 2006
  • In this article, we present a new slow-start variant, which improves the throughput of transmission control protocol (TCP) Vegas. We call this new mechanism Gallop-Vegas because it quickly ramps up to the available bandwidth and reduces the burstiness during the slow-start phase. TCP is known to send bursts of packets during its slow-start phase due to the fast window increase and the ACK-clock based transmission. This phenomenon causes TCP Vegas to change from slow-start phase to congestion-avoidance phase too early in the large bandwidth-delay product (BDP) links. Therefore, in Gallop-Vegas, we increase the congestion window size with a rate between exponential growth and linear growth during slow-start phase. Our analysis, simulation results, and measurements on the Internet show that Gallop-Vegas significantly improves the performance of a connection, especially during the slow-start phase. Furthermore, it is implementation feasible because only sending part needs to be modified.

Performance Enhancement of High-Speed TCP Protocols using Pacing (Pacing 적용을 통한 High-Speed TCP 프로토콜의 성능 개선 방안)

  • Choi Young Soo;Lee Gang Won;Cho You Ze;Han Tae Man
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
    • /
    • v.29 no.12B
    • /
    • pp.1052-1062
    • /
    • 2004
  • Recent studies have pointed out that existing high-speed TCP protocols have a severe unfairness and TCP friendliness problem. As the congestion window achieved by a high-speed TCP connection can be quite large, there is a strong possibility that the sender will transmit a large burst of packets. As such, the current congestion control mechanisms of high-speed TCP can lead to bursty traffic flows in hi인 speed networks, with a negative impact on both TCP friendliness and RTT unfairness. The proposed solution to these problems is to evenly space the data sent into the network over an entire round-trip time. Accordingly, the current paper evaluates this approach with a high bandwidth-delay product network and shows that pacing offers better TCP friendliness and fairness without degrading the bandwidth scalability.

The Congestion Control using Multiple Time Scale under Self-Similar Traffic of TCP (TCP의 자기 유사성 트래픽 조건하에서 다중 시간 간격을 이용한 혼잡 제어)

  • 김광준;윤찬호;김천석
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information and Communication Engineering
    • /
    • v.8 no.2
    • /
    • pp.310-323
    • /
    • 2004
  • In this paper, we extend the multiple time scale control framework to window-based congestion control, in particular, TCP This is performed by interfacing TCP with a large tine scale control nodule which adjusts the aggressiveness of bandwidth consumption behavior exhibited by TCP as a function of "large time scale" network state. i.e., conformation that exceeds the horizon of the feedback loop as determined by RTT Our contribution is threefold. First, we define a modular extension of TCP-a function call with a simple interface-that applies to various flavors of TCP-e.g., Tahoe, Reno, Vegas and show that it significantly improves performance. Second, we show that multiple time scale TCP endows the underlying feedback control with preactivity by bridging the uncertainty gap associated with reactive controls which is exacerbated by the high delay-bandwidth product in broadband wide area networks. Third, we investigate the influence of three traffic control dimensions-tracking ability, connection duration, and fairness-on performance. Performance evaluation of multiple time scale TCP is facilitated by a simulation bench-mark environment which is based on physical modeling of self-similar traffic.