DocumentCode
1606145
Title
Implementing an IPv6 QoS management scheme using flow label & class of service fields
Author
Fgee, El-Bahlul ; Kenney, Jason D. ; Phillips, William J. ; Robertson, William ; Sivakumar, S.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Eng. Math., Dalhousie Univ., Halifax, NS, Canada
Volume
2
fYear
2004
Firstpage
1049
Abstract
The core of any quality of service (QoS) scheme is how to monitor and manage traffic flows that have guaranteed QoS. The two QoS approaches used in the literature are, IntServ (integrated service) (White, P.P., 1997) and DiffServ (differentiated service) (Blake, S. et al., 1998). IntServ uses the resource reservation protocol (RSVP) for signaling the path. Decisions on QoS requests are taken by each router independently. DiffServ uses bandwidth brokers as a QoS management model to negotiate requests, communicate with edge nodes and track reservations. We propose an IPv6 QoS management scheme that uses the flow label and traffic class (TC) fields for reserving resources. Edge nodes use these two fields for classification, scheduling and monitoring traffic flows which have requested QoS from the network. Classification is not limited to a number of predefined classes, but on the priority levels (TC field). Processing time is minimized and routing is optimized as routers have to check only the flow identification fields, source IP address and flow label, to direct traffic appropriately. The QoS parameters used are end-to-end delay and packet loss. The simulations are performed on a network simulator (NS-2) (http://www.isi.edu/nsnam/ns/, 2003).
Keywords
Internet; computer network management; delays; minimisation; monitoring; quality of service; resource allocation; scheduling; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication signalling; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; DiffServ; IPv6 QoS management scheme; IntServ; RSVP; admission control; bandwidth brokers; class of service; differentiated service; end-to-end delay; flow identification fields; flow label; integrated service; packet loss; quality of service; resource reservation protocol; routing; source IP address; traffic flow classification; traffic flow monitoring; traffic flow scheduling; Bandwidth; Diffserv networks; Intserv networks; Monitoring; Protocols; Quality management; Quality of service; Resource management; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2004. Canadian Conference on
ISSN
0840-7789
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8253-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCECE.2004.1345298
Filename
1345298
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