Abstract:- Traffic marking is an essential component in any Differentiated Services (DS) architecture. Traffic marking can be done with respect to a single flow or a flow aggregate. In a DS network, traffic marking is typically performed at aggregate levels, rather than on the level of individual flows. The use of aggregation raises a number of concerns, such as fairness concern. When we deal with aggregated sources in such networks, we need to consider not only the fairness issues among aggregates but also the fairness issues among individual flows within an aggregate. We have carried out measurements in a test network to examine the effect of DS mechanisms on the fairness among individual TCP flows. The aim of the measurements was to eval...
Stability of the Internet today depends largely on cooperation between end hosts that employ TCP (Tr...
The notion of fairness with respect to resource sharing among the competing flows is one of the impo...
In networking, it is often required to quantify by how much one protocol is fairer than another and ...
This paper examines the fairness issues among individual TCP flows in a Differentiated Services (DS)...
This paper examines the interaction among short-lived and long-lived TCP flows in a test network tha...
Many new transport protocols are being defined, including, for example, variants of the Transmission...
Abstract This paper presents results from performance measurements in a test network that can be op...
Achievable quality of service (QoS) among flows with disparate metrics in Differentiated Services (D...
Many new transport protocols are being defined, including, for example, variants of the Transmission...
The quality of service (QoS) requirements do not define a marker algorithm for service classes and m...
The majority of the traffic (bytes) flowing over the Internet today have been attributed to the Tran...
Publié dans Journal of Communications vol. 14, no. 11, pp. 1017-1025, 2019International audienceCong...
The rise in demand for real-time applications on the Internet necessitates Quality of Service (QoS)....
Abstract—A new fairness concept for Flow-Aware Networks (FAN) is presented and analyzed in the paper...
Fairness to current Internet traffic, particularly TCP, is an important requirement for new protocol...
Stability of the Internet today depends largely on cooperation between end hosts that employ TCP (Tr...
The notion of fairness with respect to resource sharing among the competing flows is one of the impo...
In networking, it is often required to quantify by how much one protocol is fairer than another and ...
This paper examines the fairness issues among individual TCP flows in a Differentiated Services (DS)...
This paper examines the interaction among short-lived and long-lived TCP flows in a test network tha...
Many new transport protocols are being defined, including, for example, variants of the Transmission...
Abstract This paper presents results from performance measurements in a test network that can be op...
Achievable quality of service (QoS) among flows with disparate metrics in Differentiated Services (D...
Many new transport protocols are being defined, including, for example, variants of the Transmission...
The quality of service (QoS) requirements do not define a marker algorithm for service classes and m...
The majority of the traffic (bytes) flowing over the Internet today have been attributed to the Tran...
Publié dans Journal of Communications vol. 14, no. 11, pp. 1017-1025, 2019International audienceCong...
The rise in demand for real-time applications on the Internet necessitates Quality of Service (QoS)....
Abstract—A new fairness concept for Flow-Aware Networks (FAN) is presented and analyzed in the paper...
Fairness to current Internet traffic, particularly TCP, is an important requirement for new protocol...
Stability of the Internet today depends largely on cooperation between end hosts that employ TCP (Tr...
The notion of fairness with respect to resource sharing among the competing flows is one of the impo...
In networking, it is often required to quantify by how much one protocol is fairer than another and ...