DocumentCode
1905752
Title
A Simulation Study of Multi-Color Marking of TCP Aggregates
Author
Allalouf, Miriam ; Shavitt, Yuval
Author_Institution
Tel-Aviv Univ., Tel Aviv
fYear
2007
fDate
15-18 Oct. 2007
Firstpage
376
Lastpage
386
Abstract
Service level agreements (SLAs) are contracts signed between a provider and a customer to govern the amount of traffic that will be serviced. This work pinpoints an important problem faced by the Internet service provider (ISP) which is to be able to differentiate between the services given to aggregates of multiple TCP connections. The metro-Ethernet access network, the differentiated services (DiffServ) architecture and the ATM reference model are three architectural models where edge routers perform traffic metering and coloring of aggregated flows according to the SLA. Finer color marking was suggested to improve differentiation quality. We observe that increasing the number of colors indeed provides a good differentiation between the aggregates according to the committed and the excess rates. We also show that the token bucket coloring policies, which are widely used for this purpose, prefer short packets and mark them with higher priority colors. The differentiation process is more difficult for the short TCP connections that remain in the slow start phase, than for the long connections that are usually in the congestion avoidance phase.
Keywords
DiffServ networks; local area networks; radio access networks; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; ATM reference model; Internet service provider; differentiated services architecture; metro-Ethernet access network; multi-color marking; multiple TCP connections; service level agreements; Aggregates; Analytical models; Bandwidth; Color; Communication system traffic control; Computational modeling; Computer networks; Diffserv networks; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Local Computer Networks, 2007. LCN 2007. 32nd IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location
Dublin
ISSN
0742-1303
Print_ISBN
0-7695-3000-1
Electronic_ISBN
0742-1303
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/LCN.2007.43
Filename
4367866
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