DocumentCode
3293587
Title
A comparison of known classes of reliable multicast protocols
Author
Levine, Brian Neil ; Garcia-Luna-Aceves, JJ
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Eng., California Univ., Santa Cruz, CA, USA
fYear
1996
fDate
29 Oct-1 Nov 1996
Firstpage
112
Lastpage
121
Abstract
We analyze the maximum throughput that the known classes of reliable multicast protocols can attain. A new taxonomy of reliable multicast protocols is introduced based on the premise that the mechanisms used to release data at the source after correct delivery should be decoupled from the mechanisms used to pace the transmission of data and to effect error recovery. Receiver-initiated protocols, which are based entirely on negative acknowledgments (NAKs) sent from the receivers to the sender, have been proposed to avoid the implosion of acknowledgments (ACKs) to the source. However, these protocols are shown to require infinite buffers in order to prevent deadlocks. Two other solutions to the ACK-implosion problem are tree-based protocols and ring-based protocols. The first organize the receivers in a tree and send ACKs along the tree; the latter send ACKs to the sender along a ring of receivers. These two classes of protocols are shown to operate correctly with finite buffers. Following our taxonomy, the maximum attainable throughput by the known classes of reliable multicast protocols is analyzed. It is shown that tree-based protocol constitute the most scalable class of all reliable multicast protocols proposed to date
Keywords
buffer storage; data communication; packet switching; protocols; receivers; telecommunication channels; telecommunication network reliability; acknowledgments implosion; data transmission; deadlocks; error recovery; finite buffers; infinite buffers; maximum throughput; negative acknowledgments; packet switching; receiver initiated protocols; reliable multicast protocols; ring-based protocols; tree-based protocols; Broadcasting; Collaboration; Error correction; Maintenance; Multicast protocols; Reliability engineering; System recovery; Taxonomy; Throughput; Unicast;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Network Protocols, 1996. Proceedings., 1996 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Columbus, OH
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7453-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICNP.1996.564920
Filename
564920
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