Title :
Future Internet video multicasting with essentially perfect resource utilization and QoS guarantees
Author_Institution :
Dept. ECE, McMaster Univ., Hamilton, ON, Canada
Abstract :
The multicasting of aggregated digital video over a proposed Future Internet backbone network with essentially perfect throughput, resource-utilization and QoS guarantees is summarized. The Future Internet routers require only minor modifications to the existing router designs. Buffers in existing internet routers are partitioned into 2 traffic classes which can co-exist, the Essentially-Perfect QoS class and the Best-Effort class, i.e., no new buffers are required. Each router includes an FPGA-based Scheduler Lookup Table for the essentially perfect QoS class. RSVP-TE is used to provision the multicast trees in an MPLS-TE network. Each router computes an essentially perfect transmission schedule for all its QoS-enabled traffic flows, which never experience interference or congestion. (This integer programming scheduling problem is a long-standing unsolved problem.) The Best-Effort traffic is scheduled using the usual Best-Effort schedulers. It is shown that thousands of bursty self-similar video streams can be multicast across the proposed Future Internet with essentially-perfect link efficiencies and QoS guarantees. The technology (i) can be added into new Internet routers with minimal cost (i.e., a few FPGAs); (ii) it allows for the co-existence of the Essentially-Perfect QoS and the usual Best Effort traffic classes; (iii) it is compatible with the existing IEFT DiffServ and MPLS-TE service models; (iv) it allows for Internet link efficiencies as high as 100%, and (v) it can reduce Internet router buffer and power requirements significantly.
Keywords :
Internet; integer programming; multicast communication; quality of service; scheduling; table lookup; telecommunication network routing; video communication; FPGA-based scheduler lookup table; IEFT DiffServ model; Internet backbone network; Internet routers; Internet video multicasting; MPLS-TE network; MPLS-TE service model; QoS guarantees; RSVP-TE; best-effort class; digital video; essentially-perfect QoS class; integer programming scheduling problem; multicast trees; resource utilization; traffic classes; Bandwidth; Delay; Internet; Quality of service; Schedules; Streaming media; Switches; Future Internet; Quality of Service; buffer sizing; essentially perfect QoS; link efficiency; low-jitter; multicast; power efficiency; scheduling; self-similar; video;
Conference_Titel :
Quality of Service (IWQoS), 2011 IEEE 19th International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0104-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1548-615X
DOI :
10.1109/IWQOS.2011.5931336