DocumentCode :
3155872
Title :
A demand driven access protocol for high speed networks
Author :
Schaffa, F. ; Willebeek-LeMair, M. ; Pate, B. ; Gerla, M.
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
fYear :
1992
fDate :
14-16 Apr 1992
Firstpage :
158
Lastpage :
164
Abstract :
A demand driven access (DDA) protocol for fiber-optic slotted rings is presented. The proposed protocol is simple and distributed. Under light load conditions, the protocol allows for efficient use of the available bandwidth since no overhead is incurred. In effect, the protocol is demand driven since access arbitration is only activated as the load increases in order to guarantee all nodes a maximum access delay. The protocol is designed for a counter-rotating dual-ring topology. Counter-rotating rings are required to carry backpressure control information in the opposite direction of the data flow. Furthermore, slots are freed at the destination node (as opposed to the source node). This considerably increases the potential throughput of the network. Simulation results demonstrate that for a ring a N nodes, given a uniform destination distribution, a maximum throughput of close to N/4 packets per slot time is achieved under heavy load conditions. Under these load conditions, the average access delay per packet is also on the order of N/4 slot times. The DDA protocol is shown to outperform FDDI both in terms of throughput and access delay
Keywords :
delays; optical fibres; optical links; protocols; access arbitration; access delay; backpressure control information; counter-rotating dual-ring topology; demand driven access protocol; fiber-optic slotted rings; high speed networks; maximum access delay; simulation; throughput; Access protocols; Bandwidth; Computer science; Delay effects; FDDI; High-speed networks; Network topology; Optical buffering; Optical fiber LAN; Throughput;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Distributed Computing Systems, 1992., Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Future Trends of
Conference_Location :
Taipei
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-2755-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FTDCS.1992.217500
Filename :
217500
Link To Document :
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