Jaime Galán-Jiménez, Mohamed Faten Zhani, José Gómez-delaHiz, John Kaippallimalil
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
As of today, transport control protocol (TCP) remains the de-facto transport protocol in the Internet. However, TCP may incur high delays, especially when retransmitting lost packets as they have to be retransmitted only by the source and after a timeout that is roughly equal to a round trip time. To reduce such delay, recent work proposed to deploy a special network function, called transport assistant (TA), that is able to detect and retransmit lost TCP packets from inside the network rather than the source and thereby reduces retransmission delays. Unfortunately, there is no study on the impact of the placement of the TA on its performance benefits in terms of packet delivery delay. In this paper, we focus on the TA placement problem. We discuss the trade-offs and parameters to be considered to select the best placement for the TA. We first mathematically model the TCP packet delivery delay, that is, the time needed to deliver TCP packets, when the TA is deployed. We also formulate, as an integer linear program (ILP), the problem of placing multiple TAs in order to reduce TCP packet delivery delays while minimizing their deployment costs. We consider use-cases, one where a TA could handle a single flow and another where a TA could handle multiple flows. We then propose two heuristics to solve the problem with minimal execution time. Through experiments, we demonstrated that the deployment of TAs could reduce TCP packet delivery delays by up to 30% and could be leveraged to guide routing and load balancing. Moreover, we show that using the proposed heuristics for placing TAs could lead to performance that is close to the optimal solutions obtained with the ILP but with lower execution time.
期刊介绍:
Modern computer networks and communication systems are increasing in size, scope, and heterogeneity. The promise of a single end-to-end technology has not been realized and likely never will occur. The decreasing cost of bandwidth is increasing the possible applications of computer networks and communication systems to entirely new domains. Problems in integrating heterogeneous wired and wireless technologies, ensuring security and quality of service, and reliably operating large-scale systems including the inclusion of cloud computing have all emerged as important topics. The one constant is the need for network management. Challenges in network management have never been greater than they are today. The International Journal of Network Management is the forum for researchers, developers, and practitioners in network management to present their work to an international audience. The journal is dedicated to the dissemination of information, which will enable improved management, operation, and maintenance of computer networks and communication systems. The journal is peer reviewed and publishes original papers (both theoretical and experimental) by leading researchers, practitioners, and consultants from universities, research laboratories, and companies around the world. Issues with thematic or guest-edited special topics typically occur several times per year. Topic areas for the journal are largely defined by the taxonomy for network and service management developed by IFIP WG6.6, together with IEEE-CNOM, the IRTF-NMRG and the Emanics Network of Excellence.