DocumentCode
379597
Title
Dynamic fair bandwidth allocation for DiffServ classes
Author
Shimonishi, Hideyuki ; Maki, Ichinoshin ; Murase, Tutomu ; Murata, Masayuki
Author_Institution
Networking Res. Labs., NEC Corp., Japan
Volume
4
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
2348
Abstract
The assured forwarding per hop behavior standardized by the IETF Differentiated Services working group provides four class-based differentiated IP services. In this service, however, unexpected service degradation may occur and differentiation among classes may be disordered if the network is designed to minimize over-provisioning or is under-provisioned. We therefore developed a packet scheduling scheme that dynamically allocates bandwidth to each class queue to guarantee the differentiation among classes under any traffic conditions. The scheme estimates the sum of CIRs (committed information rates), i.e. rate of the packets having lowest drop preference, of active flows in each class and initially allocates the link bandwidth according to the sum of CIRs. It allocates the excess bandwidth by using a combination of CIR-proportional allocation and equal-share allocation. The equal share part enables that the flows in best effort class or the flows having zero CIRs can utilize minimum share of the bandwidth. Our scheme also introduces a scalable scheduling technique to improve fairness among flows in the same class. We evaluate the proposed scheme and show that it makes DiffServ operations fairer under any traffic conditions.
Keywords
Internet; bandwidth allocation; packet switching; quality of service; queueing theory; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; CIR-proportional allocation; DiffServ classes; IETF Differentiated Services working group; IP header; Internet; QoS; TCP/UDP; assured forwarding per hop behavior; best effort class; class-based differentiated IP services; committed information rates; dynamic fair bandwidth allocation; edge routers; equal-share allocation; flow aggregation level control; high-speed backbone routers; link bandwidth; packet drop preference; packet scheduling; quality of service; queue management; scalable scheduling; service degradation; traffic conditions; Bandwidth; Channel allocation; Degradation; Diffserv networks; Information rates; National electric code; Quality of service; Resource management; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 2002. ICC 2002. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7400-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.2002.997264
Filename
997264
Link To Document