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Decoupling Packet Loss from Blocking in Proactive Reservation-Based Switching
San Jose, California, USA October 25-October 29
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/BROADNETS.2004.28First International Conference on Bro ...
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Mahmoud Elhaddad, University of Pittsburgh, PA
Rami Melhem, University of Pittsburgh, PA
Taieb Znati, University of Pittsburgh, PA
We consider the maximization of network throughput in buffer-constrained optical networks using aggregate bandwidth allocation and reservation-based transmission control. Assuming that all flows are subject to loss-based TCP congestion control, we quantify the effects of buffer capacity constraints on bandwidth utilization efficiency through contention-induced packet loss. The analysis shows that the ability of TCP flows to efficiently utilize successful reservations is highly sensitive to the available buffer capacity. Maximizing the bandwidth utilization efficiency under buffer capacity constraints thus requires decoupling packet loss from contention-induced blocking of transmission requests. We describe a confirmed (two-way) reservation scheme that eliminates contention-induced loss, so that no packets are dropped at the network's core, and loss can be incurred only at the adequately buffer-provisioned ingress routers, where it is exclusively congestion-induced. For the confirmed signaling scheme, analytical and simulation results indicate that TCP aggregates are able to efficiently utilize the successful reservations independently of buffer constraints.
Citation:
Mahmoud Elhaddad, Rami Melhem, Taieb Znati, "Decoupling Packet Loss from Blocking in Proactive Reservation-Based Switching," broadnets, pp.92-101, First International Conference on Broadband Networks (BROADNETS'04), 2004
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