• DocumentCode
    1556239
  • Title

    Promoting the use of end-to-end congestion control in the Internet

  • Author

    Floyd, Sally ; Fall, Kevin

  • Author_Institution
    AT&T Centre for Internet Res., ICSI, Berkeley, CA, USA
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    1999
  • fDate
    8/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    458
  • Lastpage
    472
  • Abstract
    This paper considers the potentially negative impacts of an increasing deployment of non-congestion-controlled best-effort traffic on the Internet. These negative impacts range from extreme unfairness against competing TCP traffic to the potential for congestion collapse. To promote the inclusion of end-to-end congestion control in the design of future protocols using best-effort traffic, we argue that router mechanisms are needed to identify and restrict the bandwidth of selected high-bandwidth best-effort flows in times of congestion. The paper discusses several general approaches for identifying those flows suitable for bandwidth regulation. These approaches are to identify a high-bandwidth flow in times of congestion as unresponsive, “not TCP-friendly”, or simply using disproportionate bandwidth. A flow that is not “TCP-friendly” is one whose long-term arrival rate exceeds that of any conformant TCP in the same circumstances. An unresponsive flow is one failing to reduce its offered load at a router in response to an increased packet drop rate, and a disproportionate-bandwidth flow is one that uses considerably more bandwidth than other flows in a time of congestion
  • Keywords
    Internet; packet switching; queueing theory; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; FCFS scheduling; Internet; TCP traffic; TCP-friendly flow; active queue management; bandwidth restriction; congestion collapse; disproportionate-bandwidth flow; end-to-end congestion control; high-bandwidth best-effort flows; long-term arrival rate; noncongestion-controlled best-effort traffic; not TCP-friendly flow; packet drop rate; protocols; router mechanisms; unfairness; unresponsive flow; Bandwidth; Communication system traffic control; Helium; Internet; Pricing; Protocols; Resource management; Robust control; Scheduling algorithm; Scientific computing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1063-6692
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/90.793002
  • Filename
    793002