Author :
Fathi, Hanane ; Chakraborty, Shyam S. ; Prasad, Ramjee
Abstract :
Wireless networks beyond 2G aim at supporting real-time applications such as VoIP. Before a user can start a VoIP session, the end-user terminal has to establish the session using signaling protocols such as H.323 and session initiation protocol (SIP) in order to negotiate media parameters. The time interval to perform the session setup is called the session setup time. It can be affected by the quality of the wireless link, measured in terms of frame error rate (FER), which can result in retransmissions of packets lost and can lengthen the session setup time. Therefore, such protocols should have a session setup time optimized against loss. One way to do so is by choosing the appropriate retransmission timer and the underlying protocols. In this paper, we focus on SIP session setup delay and propose optimizing it using an adaptive retransmission timer. We also evaluate SIP session setup performances with various underlying protocols (transport control protocol (TCP), user datagram protocol (UDP), radio link protocols (RLPs)) as a function of the FER. For 19.2 Kbps channel, the SIP session setup time can be up to 6.12 s with UDP and 7 s with TCP when the FER is up to 10 percent. The use of RLP (1, 2, 3) and RLP (1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) puts the session setup time down to 3.4 s under UDP and 4 s under TCP for the same FER and the same channel bandwidth. We also compare SIP and H.323 performances using an adaptive retransmission timer: SIP outperforms H.323, especially for a FER higher than 2 percent
Keywords :
3G mobile communication; Internet telephony; bandwidth allocation; radio links; signalling protocols; transport protocols; wireless channels; 19.2 Kbit/s; 3G wireless networks; SIP session setup delay; TCP; VoIP; adaptive retransmission timer; channel bandwidth; frame error rate; radio link protocols; session initiation protocol; session setup time; signaling protocols; transport control protocol; user datagram protocol; wireless link; Delay; Error analysis; Length measurement; Loss measurement; Performance evaluation; Radio control; Radio link; Time measurement; Transport protocols; Wireless networks; H.323; IP-based wireless networks; RLP; SIP; TCP; UDP; session setup delay; signaling performance.;