DocumentCode
414992
Title
DiffServ compatible extended pause (DiffPause) for fair congestion control in Metro-Ethernet
Author
Ge, An ; Chiruvolu, Girish
Author_Institution
Res. & Innovation, Alcatel USA, Plano, TX, USA
Volume
2
fYear
2004
fDate
20-24 June 2004
Firstpage
1248
Abstract
This paper presents a novel scheme called DiffPause for congestion control that is highly scalable, robust, and compatible with the assured forwarding (AF) of the differentiated services (DiffServ) model for high-speed Metro Ethernet. The IEEE 802.3x (.3x) PAUSE message is extended to support class and color (drop precedence) of the packets for transient congestion control. The DiffPause introduces an early warning threshold (EWT) such that the upstream nodes can reduce the outgoing rate and throttle the aggressive traffic aggregates, thereby providing fair bandwidth allocation. Further, the DiffPause scheme takes into account the dominant color of packets in a congested buffer. In addition, the scheme takes advantage of per link-based back-pressure mechanism without any bandwidth reservation and is independent of the number of ongoing individual sessions, thus leading to high scalability. The simulation studies demonstrate the superior performance of the DiffPause scheme over the existing color-blind .3x. Results further show that, on an average, with less than 15% extra PAUSE messages in comparison to the .3x scheme, the DiffPause achieves substantial improvement in the fairness, throughput and low delay for lower drop precedence packets.
Keywords
bandwidth allocation; local area networks; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication links; telecommunication services; telecommunication traffic; DiffPause scheme; DiffServ compatible extended pause; IEEE 802.3x PAUSE message; aggressive traffic aggregates; assured forwarding; bandwidth allocation; color-blind .3x; differentiated services model; early warning threshold; metro-Ethernet; per link-based back-pressure mechanism; transient congestion control; Aggregates; Bandwidth; Channel allocation; Delay; Diffserv networks; Ethernet networks; Robust control; Scalability; Throughput; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 2004 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8533-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.2004.1312699
Filename
1312699
Link To Document