DocumentCode :
449432
Title :
Last mile problem in overlay design
Author :
Dube, Parijat ; Liu, Zhen ; Sahu, Sambit ; Silber, Jeremy
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2005
fDate :
28 Nov.-2 Dec. 2005
Abstract :
Performance of overlay networks is dependent on last-mile connections, since they require that data traverse these last-mile bottlenecks at each forwarding step. This requires several times more upstream bandwidth than downstream, further exaggerating the asymmetry between down-stream and upstream bandwidth in last-mile technologies. This imbalance can cause packet queuing at the outgoing network interface of forwarding nodes, increasing latency and causing packet losses. We describe a model of a last-mile constrained overlay network and formulate and use it to solve a simplified latency- and bandwidth-bounded overlay construction problem. We observe that queueing delay may be a significant component of the end-to-end delay and approaches ignoring this may potentially result in an overlay network violating the delay and/or loss bounds. We observe that allowing a small amount of loss, it is possible to support a significantly large number of nodes. For a given end to end delay and loss bound we identify feasible degree (fan out) of each nodes. Our study sheds insights which provide engineering guidelines for designing overlays accounting for last mile problem in the Internet.
Keywords :
Internet; bandwidth allocation; queueing theory; Internet; down-stream bandwidth; end-to-end delay; overlay network; packet queuing; upstream bandwidth; Bandwidth; Communication cables; DSL; Delay; Design engineering; Guidelines; Intelligent networks; Internet telephony; Modems; Network interfaces;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2005. GLOBECOM '05. IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9414-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2005.1577772
Filename :
1577772
Link To Document :
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