DocumentCode
343397
Title
Analysis of Internet services in IP over ATM networks
Author
Aracil, J. ; Morató, D. ; Izal, M.
Author_Institution
Dept. de Autom. y Comput., Univ. Publica de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain
fYear
1999
fDate
1999
Firstpage
258
Lastpage
266
Abstract
This paper presents a trace-driven analysis of IP over ATM services from a user-perceived quality of service standpoint. QoS parameters such as the sustained throughput for transactional services and other ATM layer parameters such as the burstiness (MBS) per connection are derived. On the other hand, a macroscopic analysis that comprises percentage of flows and bytes per service, TCP transaction duration and mean bytes transferred in both directions is also presented. The traffic trace is obtained with novel measurement equipment that combines header extraction hardware and a high-end UNIX workstation capable of providing a timestamp accuracy in the order of microseconds. The ATM link under analysis concentrates traffic from a large population of 1500 hosts from the Public University of Navarra campus network, that produced 1700000 TCP connections approximately in the measurement period of one week. The results obtained from such a wealth of data suggest that QoS is primarily determined by transport protocols and not by ATM bandwidth. The sustained throughput of TCP connections never grows beyond 80 Kbit/s with 70% probability in the data transfer phase (i.e., in the ESTABLISHED state) and we observe a strong influence of the connection establishment phase in the user-perceived throughput. On the other hand, the burstiness of individual TCP connections is rather small, namely TCP connections do not produce bursts according to the geometric law given by slow start and commonly assumed in previously published studies
Keywords
Internet; asynchronous transfer mode; probability; quality of service; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; IP over ATM networks; Internet services; Public University of Navarra; QoS; TCP transaction duration; UNIX workstation; burstiness; bytes per service; campus network; connection establishment phase; flows; header extraction hardware; macroscopic analysis; mean bytes transferred; probability; quality of service; sustained throughput; trace-driven analysis; traffic; transactional services; transport protocols; user-perceived throughput; Asynchronous transfer mode; Intelligent networks; Quality of service; Resource management; Spine; TCPIP; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput; Transport protocols; Web and internet services;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
ATM, 1999. ICATM '99. 1999 2nd International Conference on
Conference_Location
Colmar
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5428-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICATM.1999.786811
Filename
786811
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