DocumentCode
2454368
Title
ENICOM´s bandwidth broker
Author
Hashmani, Manzoor ; Yoshida, Mikio
Author_Institution
Nippon Steel Inf. & Commun. Syst. Inc, Japan
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
213
Lastpage
220
Abstract
There is enormous potential for the growth of the Internet if businesses are able to use it for their mission-critical applications, but these applications can use the Internet only if it provides QoS (quality of service) assurance. Recently, the differentiated services (DiffServ) architecture has been proposed to provide guaranteed QoS on the Internet, and it is said to be more scalable than the earlier integrated services (IntServ) model. DiffServ ensures guaranteed QoS on only a hop-by-hop or edge-to-edge basis. To provide an end-to-end guarantee in DiffServ, a bandwidth broker (BB) framework has been proposed to perform admission control over DiffServ domains. In 1999, an initiative was undertaken by CKP/NGI (Cyber Kansai Project/Next-Generation Internet) to provide a guarantee of end-to-end QoS for business contents over the Internet using a premium service [using the EF (expedited forwarding) PHB (per-hop behavior) of DiffServ]. As part of this initiative, ENICOM (Nippon Steel Information & Communication System Inc.) developed a BB and tested it on an experimental WAN in Japan. Since its creation, this BB has been continuously modified and enhanced to accommodate more services and standards. First, this paper provides a report of our BB, its implementation and deployment experience. Then we propose modifications in our design to incorporate recently proposed standards. We also describe experiments and simulations which have been performed and those that are in the pipeline
Keywords
Internet; bandwidth allocation; quality of service; research initiatives; telecommunication congestion control; Cyber Kansai Project; DiffServ architecture; ENICOM; Next-Generation Internet; Nippon Steel Information & Communication System Inc; WAN; admission control; bandwidth broker; business contents; business mission-critical applications; design modifications; differentiated services; edge-to-edge QoS guarantee; end-to-end QoS guarantee; expedited forwarding; hop-by-hop QoS guarantee; per-hop behavior; premium service; scalability; service assurance; standards; Admission control; Bandwidth; Diffserv networks; Intserv networks; Mission critical systems; Quality of service; Steel; System testing; Web and internet services; Wide area networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Applications and the Internet Workshops, 2001. Proceedings. 2001 Symposium on
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0945-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SAINTW.2001.998233
Filename
998233
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