The end-to-end nature of Internet congestion control is an important factor in its scalability and robustness. However, end-to-end congestion control algorithms alone are incapable of preventing the congestion collapse and unfair bandwidth allocations created by applications which are unresponsive to network congestion. In this paper, we propose and investigate a new congestion avoidance mechanism called Network Border Patrol (NBP). NBP relies on the exchange of feedback between routers at the borders of a network in order to detect and restrict unresponsive traffic flows before they enter the network. The NBP mechanism is compliant with the Internet philosophy of pushing complexity toward the edges of the network whenever possible. Simulat...
Existing Internet protocols rely on cooperative behavior of end users. We present a control-theoreti...
textIn a shared network such as the Internet, end systems should react to congestion by adapting th...
Congestion control mechanisms in today’s Internet represent perhaps the largest artificial feedback ...
Congestion within the network is developing immensely because of the increase of usage of multimedia...
The basic concept behind the Internet is expressed by the scalability argument: mechanism or service...
End-to-end congestion control is an important reason why the Internet is robust, scalable and simple...
Queueing is a crucial component in effective router congestion control. If packets are dropped indis...
Abstract: Congestion is said to occur in the network when the resource demands exceed the capacity a...
The Internet is dynamically shared by numerous flows of data traffic. Network congestion occurs when...
The congestion control mechanism has been responsible for maintaining stability as the Internet scal...
Congestion is a natural phenomenon in any network queuing system, and is unavoidable if the queuing ...
The relatively recent explosion of mobile traffic in the internet, combined with a near constant dep...
The success of the Internet can partly be attributed to the congestion control algorithm in the Tran...
The success of the Internet can partly be attributed to the congestion control algorithm in the Tran...
The Internet�s exceptional scalability and sturdiness results in the formof end-to-end Internet crow...
Existing Internet protocols rely on cooperative behavior of end users. We present a control-theoreti...
textIn a shared network such as the Internet, end systems should react to congestion by adapting th...
Congestion control mechanisms in today’s Internet represent perhaps the largest artificial feedback ...
Congestion within the network is developing immensely because of the increase of usage of multimedia...
The basic concept behind the Internet is expressed by the scalability argument: mechanism or service...
End-to-end congestion control is an important reason why the Internet is robust, scalable and simple...
Queueing is a crucial component in effective router congestion control. If packets are dropped indis...
Abstract: Congestion is said to occur in the network when the resource demands exceed the capacity a...
The Internet is dynamically shared by numerous flows of data traffic. Network congestion occurs when...
The congestion control mechanism has been responsible for maintaining stability as the Internet scal...
Congestion is a natural phenomenon in any network queuing system, and is unavoidable if the queuing ...
The relatively recent explosion of mobile traffic in the internet, combined with a near constant dep...
The success of the Internet can partly be attributed to the congestion control algorithm in the Tran...
The success of the Internet can partly be attributed to the congestion control algorithm in the Tran...
The Internet�s exceptional scalability and sturdiness results in the formof end-to-end Internet crow...
Existing Internet protocols rely on cooperative behavior of end users. We present a control-theoreti...
textIn a shared network such as the Internet, end systems should react to congestion by adapting th...
Congestion control mechanisms in today’s Internet represent perhaps the largest artificial feedback ...