Title :
Upgrading Mice to Elephants: Effects and End-Point Solutions
Author :
Mondal, Amit ; Kuzmanovic, Aleksandar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL, USA
fDate :
4/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Short TCP flows may suffer significant response-time performance degradations during network congestion. Unfortunately, this creates an incentive for misbehavior by clients of interactive applications (e.g., gaming, telnet, web): to send ??dummy?? packets into the network at a TCP-fair rate even when they have no data to send, thus improving their performance in moments when they do have data to send. Even though no ??law?? is violated in this way, a large-scale deployment of such an approach has the potential to seriously jeopardize one of the core Internet´s principles-statistical multiplexing. We quantify, by means of analytical modeling and simulation, gains achievable by the above misbehavior. Our research indicates that easy-to-implement application-level techniques are capable of dramatically reducing incentives for conducting the above transgressions, still without compromising the idea of statistical multiplexing.
Keywords :
statistical multiplexing; telecommunication congestion control; transport protocols; application-level techniques; dummy packets; interactive applications; network congestion; response-time performance degradations; short TCP flows; statistical multiplexing; Interactive application; TCP; retransmission timeout; statistical multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2009.2025927