Title :
Comparison of call gapping and percent blocking for overload control in distributed switching systems and telecommunications networks
Author :
Berger, Arthur W.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Bell Lab., Holmdel, NJ, USA
fDate :
4/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Two overload control techniques are compared. A percent blocking throttle blocks and rejects an arrival with a given probability. A call gapping throttle closes the gap size for a deterministic time interval; after this interval, the next job to arrive passes through and the throttle again closes for the deterministic time interval. The comparison of the throttle schemes is based on nine criteria, seven of which concern robustness. The key strengths of call gapping are shown to be a greater robustness to changes in total arrival rate, and higher goodput, the throughput times the probability of it being good. For varying arrival rate, where the control setting is fixed, call gapping maintains reasonable goodput over regions where percent blocking has allowed goodput to fall to zero. The strengths of percent blocking are shown to be robustness to changes in number of active sources and robustness to unbalanced loads. The optimal control setting for percent blocking is shown to be a function of the total arrival rate and not a function of the number of active sources or the individual arrival rates
Keywords :
queueing theory; switching systems; telecommunication networks; telecommunications control; call gapping; deterministic time interval; distributed switching systems; goodput; optimal control; overload control; percent blocking; queueing theory; robustness; telecommunications networks; throughput times; total arrival rate; Centralized control; Communication system control; Control systems; Distributed control; Intelligent networks; Robust control; Robustness; Switching systems; Telecommunication control; Telecommunication network topology;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on