Title :
Experiments of the theory of effective bandwidth for Markov sources and video traces
Author :
Chou, Le-Sheng ; Chang, Cheng-Shang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Tsing Hua Univ., Hsinchu, Taiwan
Abstract :
We use the theory of effective bandwidth for bandwidth allocation in high speed digital networks (ATM), and experiment with simulated Markov traces and actual VBR traces. To approximate the effective bandwidth, we use the four traffic descriptors: average rate, asymptotic variance, peak rate and average burst duration. In our experiments, we find the theory yields good approximations of the queue length distributions for simulated Markov traces and a video conference trace. However, our estimations for asymptotic variance do not converge for some VBR video traces. This implies that some VBR traces might be long-range dependent. Based for the fractional Brownian motion (FBM) model, we revise the theory of effective bandwidth and modify the associated traffic descriptors for such VBR traces. Our experiments show that the FBM model is good in heavy traffic, but does not fit well in light traffic
Keywords :
Brownian motion; Markov processes; approximation theory; asynchronous transfer mode; digital television; queueing theory; telecommunication networks; telecommunication traffic; teleconferencing; visual communication; ATM networks; FBM model; Markov sources; VBR traces; asymptotic variance; average burst duration; average rate; bandwidth allocation; effective bandwidth approximation; experiments; fractional Brownian motion model; heavy traffic; high speed digital networks; light traffic; long-range dependent traces; peak rate; queue length distributions; simulated Markov traces; traffic descriptors; video conference trace; video traces; Asynchronous transfer mode; Bandwidth; Channel allocation; Computational modeling; Contracts; Councils; Density functional theory; Switches; Traffic control; Videoconference;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM '96. Fifteenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer Societies. Networking the Next Generation. Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7293-5
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.1996.493317