textIP multicast is a network service for scalable distribution of data to multiple receivers. Traditional protocols for multicast congestion control rely on trust: each party is assumed to follow guidelines for fair bandwidth sharing. However, with the growth and commercialization of the Internet, the assumption of universal trust is no longer tenable. In this dissertation, we consider a relaxed model where receivers are untrustworthy and can misbehave to acquire an unfairly high bandwidth at the expense of competing traffic. Our experiments with existing multicast protocols show that each of the evaluated protocols is vulnerable to receiver misbehavior. To take the first step towards robust multicast designs for distrusted environ...
Multicast is becoming an increasingly important transmission method on the Internet, since when de...
Current reliable multicast protocols do not have scalable congestion control mechanisms and this def...
Over the last three decades the Internet has evolved from a network of a dozen academics to one that...
textIP multicast is a network service for scalable distribution of data to multiple receivers. Trad...
Group subscription is a useful mechanism for multicast congestion control: RLM, RLC, FLID-DL, and WE...
ABSTRACT Congestion control protocols rely on receivers to support fair bandwidth sharing. However, ...
Existing multicast control algorithms typically assume trust and free sharing of information among r...
Applications involving the reliable transfer of large volumes of data from a source to multiple dest...
Recently, a TCP-friendly, single-rate multicast congestion control scheme called pgmcc was introduce...
Fairness to current Internet traffic, particularly TCP, is an important requirement for new protocol...
Abstract We study fairness of resource allocation in multirate, multicast networks. In multirate net...
In recent years, emerging multicast applications involving data delivery from a single source to a l...
textIn a shared network such as the Internet, end systems should react to congestion by adapting th...
We discuss congestion control mechanisms in multicast transport protocols and we propose TCP-M - a T...
Current reliable multicast protocols do not have scalable congestion control mechanisms and this def...
Multicast is becoming an increasingly important transmission method on the Internet, since when de...
Current reliable multicast protocols do not have scalable congestion control mechanisms and this def...
Over the last three decades the Internet has evolved from a network of a dozen academics to one that...
textIP multicast is a network service for scalable distribution of data to multiple receivers. Trad...
Group subscription is a useful mechanism for multicast congestion control: RLM, RLC, FLID-DL, and WE...
ABSTRACT Congestion control protocols rely on receivers to support fair bandwidth sharing. However, ...
Existing multicast control algorithms typically assume trust and free sharing of information among r...
Applications involving the reliable transfer of large volumes of data from a source to multiple dest...
Recently, a TCP-friendly, single-rate multicast congestion control scheme called pgmcc was introduce...
Fairness to current Internet traffic, particularly TCP, is an important requirement for new protocol...
Abstract We study fairness of resource allocation in multirate, multicast networks. In multirate net...
In recent years, emerging multicast applications involving data delivery from a single source to a l...
textIn a shared network such as the Internet, end systems should react to congestion by adapting th...
We discuss congestion control mechanisms in multicast transport protocols and we propose TCP-M - a T...
Current reliable multicast protocols do not have scalable congestion control mechanisms and this def...
Multicast is becoming an increasingly important transmission method on the Internet, since when de...
Current reliable multicast protocols do not have scalable congestion control mechanisms and this def...
Over the last three decades the Internet has evolved from a network of a dozen academics to one that...