• DocumentCode
    3059724
  • Title

    Impact of CPU reservation on end-to-end media data transmission

  • Author

    Viswanathan, Arun ; Nahrstedt, Klara ; Xu, Dongyan ; Wichadakul, Duangdao

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL, USA
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    36982
  • Firstpage
    354
  • Lastpage
    361
  • Abstract
    Current distributed multimedia applications usually use either best-effort or reservation-based network bandwidth allocation for media data transmission. We argue that end-system CPU reservation also plays an important role in media data transport. We present an analysis of the impact of CPU reservation on media data transmission tasks and its integration with the network bandwidth reservation mechanism. The underlying transport protocols considered are TCP and UDP, supporting flows over RSVP-capable networks. The integration comes together in a QoS-aware communication broker architecture which considers both CPU and network bandwidth reservation for media data transport. Our results show that the reservation of CPU for multimedia transmission tasks at end systems needs to be an integral part of the end-to-end resource management framework, in order to provide end-to-end QoS guarantees. Experiments on a prototype system with CPU reservation for transmission tasks show substantial improvement in the performance and service quality of media data transport, relative to its performance in the absence of CPU reservation. In the absence of CPU reservation, media data transport can exhibit non-trivial performance and QoS degradation, even in the presence of end-to-end bandwidth guarantees
  • Keywords
    Internet; computer network management; multimedia communication; quality of service; resource allocation; transport protocols; CPU reservation; QoS-aware communication broker architecture; RSVP-capable networks; TCP; UDP; distributed multimedia applications; end-to-end media data transmission; end-to-end resource management framework; media data transmission; media data transport; multimedia transmission tasks; network bandwidth reservation; network bandwidth reservation mechanism; reservation-based network bandwidth allocation; service quality; transport protocols; Availability; Bandwidth; Contracts; Data communication; Multimedia systems; NASA; Protocols; Prototypes; Quality of service; Resource management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Performance, Computing, and Communications, 2001. IEEE International Conference on.
  • Conference_Location
    Phoenix, AZ
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-7001-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IPCCC.2001.918673
  • Filename
    918673