Title :
Design of a fair bandwidth allocation policy for VBR traffic in ATM networks
Author :
Biswas, Subir K. ; Izmailov, Rauf
Author_Institution :
C&C Res. Labs., NEC USA Inc., Princeton, NJ, USA
fDate :
4/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Since real-time variable bit rate (VBR) traffic is inherently bursty, dynamic bandwidth allocation is necessary for ATM streams that carry VBR traffic. In order to provide quality-of-services (QoS) guarantees and to reduce the computational complexity, an hybrid of guaranteed and dynamic adaptive allocation scheme requires to be implemented. Typical dynamic allocations to competing streams are done in the form of linear proportions to the bandwidth requirements. We show that during temporary link congestion such proportional arrangements can give rise to unequal queue growth and, subsequently, degraded QoS. This is found to be true even for streams that belong to the same VBR class and share identical long term traffic characteristics and QoS requirements. In this paper, four allocation algorithms are presented and analyzed in terms of their fairness and QoS potential for real-time VBR traffic. We propose and show that a novel allocation strategy, termed Minmax, solves the mentioned problem of unfairness within a class. By maintaining a fair distribution of buffer length across the streams of a class, the proposed policy can achieve better and fairer QoS performance compared to the traditional methods. We present analytical results, proofs and a simulation study of the described algorithms. Four allocation policies for handling MPEG VBR video streams are simulated in the context of a wireless ATM (WATM) medium access control. The results show that in certain scenarios, the Minmax strategy can reduce losses by an order of magnitude, while decreasing delays substantially
Keywords :
asynchronous transfer mode; bandwidth allocation; cellular radio; computational complexity; delays; packet radio networks; quality of service; queueing theory; telecommunication traffic; time division multiple access; visual communication; ATM networks; MPEG VBR video streams; Minmax strategy; QoS guarantees; QoS performance; TDMA; WATM medium access control; bandwidth allocation algorithms; buffer length; cellular radio; computational complexity reduction; degraded QoS; delay reduction; dynamic adaptive allocation; fair bandwidth allocation policy; fair distribution; guaranteed adaptive allocation; long term traffic characteristics; loss reduction; quality of services; real-time VBR traffic; real-time variable bit rate traffic; simulation study; temporary link congestion; unequal queue growth; wireless ATM; Algorithm design and analysis; Bandwidth; Bit rate; Channel allocation; Computational complexity; Degradation; Minimax techniques; Quality of service; Streaming media; Traffic control;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on