DocumentCode
621159
Title
To the Moon and back: Are Internet bufferbloat delays really that large?
Author
Chirichella, Chiara ; Rossi, Davide
Author_Institution
Telecom ParisTech, Paris, France
fYear
2013
fDate
14-19 April 2013
Firstpage
417
Lastpage
422
Abstract
Recently, the “bufferbloat” term has been coined to describe very large queuing delays (up to several seconds) experienced by Internet users. This problem has pushed protocol designer to deploy alternative (delay-based) models to the standard (lossbased) TCP best effort congestion control. In this work, we exploit timestamp information carried in the LEDBAT header, a protocol proposed by BitTorrent as replacement for TCP data transfer, to infer the queuing delay suffered by remote hosts. We conduct a thorough measurement campaign, that let us conclude that (i) LEDBAT delay-based congestion control is effective in keeping the queuing delay low for the bulk of the peers, (ii) yet about 1% of peers often experience queuing delay in excess of 1s, and (iii) not only the network access type, but also the BitTorrent client and the operating system concurr in determining the bufferbloat magnitude.
Keywords
Internet; delays; operating systems (computers); protocols; queueing theory; telecommunication congestion control; BitTorrent client; Internet; LEDBAT delay-based congestion control; LEDBAT header; TCP data transfer; bufferbloat delay; congestion control; operating system; protocol; queuing delay; timestamp information; Delays; Internet; Monitoring; Operating systems; Probes; Protocols; Queueing analysis;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Communications Workshops (INFOCOM WKSHPS), 2013 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location
Turin
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-0055-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFCOMW.2013.6562886
Filename
6562886
Link To Document