DocumentCode :
2125169
Title :
So you think you can measure IP QoS?
Author :
Schormans, John A. ; Pitts, Jonathan M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. Eng., London Underground Ltd., UK
fYear :
2004
fDate :
2-3 March 2004
Firstpage :
151
Lastpage :
155
Abstract :
For broadband networking to be a commercial success, operators need to provide differentiated levels of quality of service (QoS). Networks are shared infrastructures of buffering and bandwidth resources, and are designed to bound the delays and losses inherent in packet queueing technology. But can customers be sure they are getting the QoS they are paying for? It is thought that active probing gives customers the ability to check that their service level agreements are being honoured, because it mimics "what the customer experiences". This may be an illusion. We investigate the trade-off between accuracy of QoS measurement and packet probing overhead. We show that, under realistic networking scenarios, measurement accuracy could be poor, giving little real indication of user experience. Our results demonstrate that the rate, size, and phasing of active probes must be carefully considered. Hence it is vital that measurement devices are configured appropriately for the networking and customer traffic scenarios.
Keywords :
IP networks; broadband networks; delays; quality of service; queueing theory; telecommunication traffic; IP QoS measurement; active probing; bandwidth resources; broadband networking; buffering; customer traffic; delays; networking traffic; packet loss; packet probing overhead; packet queueing; quality of service; service level agreements;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Telecommunications Quality of Services: The Business of Success, 2004. QoS 2004. IEE
ISSN :
0537-9989
Print_ISBN :
0-86341-393-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1049/ic:20040033
Filename :
1515086
Link To Document :
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