DocumentCode :
1748191
Title :
QMAC: a QoS-guaranteed MAC protocol with dynamic granularity control for local wireless ATM networks
Author :
Yuang, Maria C. ; Lo, Bird C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Chiao Tung Univ., Hsinchu, Taiwan
Volume :
8
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
2359
Abstract :
We propose a QoS-guaranteed MAC protocol (QMAC) augmented with dynamic granularity (frame size) control, aiming to provide bandwidth-on-demand while retaining maximal throughput. QMAC supports three types of ATM traffic-CBR, VBR, ABR, along with reservation request (RVR) traffic for making connection reservation. While CBR/VBR/ABR is governed by reservation access over the reservation bandwidth, RVR is conducted by random access over the contention bandwidth. QMAC essentially exerts dynamic granularity control on per-frame-based allocation of the reservation and contention bandwidth. The reservation bandwidth is allocated following a weight-based scheduling policy. For the allocation of the contention bandwidth, based on a neural-fuzzy traffic prediction technique, QMAC derives the “favorable bandwidth” implying maximum throughput. The smaller value between the favorable bandwidth and remaining unreserved bandwidth is designated as the contention bandwidth. Simulation results demonstrate that, compared to a set of MAC alternatives under M-Pareto-distributed and dynamic traffic settings, QMAC invariantly achieves superior performance with respect to throughput, access delay, and blocking probability
Keywords :
access protocols; asynchronous transfer mode; bandwidth allocation; delays; fuzzy neural nets; packet radio networks; probability; quality of service; telecommunication computing; telecommunication control; telecommunication traffic; ABR; ATM traffic; CBR; M-Pareto-distributed traffic; QMAC; QoS-guaranteed MAC protocol; VBR; access delay; bandwidth-on-demand; blocking probability; connection reservation; contention bandwidth allocation; dynamic granularity control; dynamic traffic; favorable bandwidth; frame size control; local wireless ATM networks; maximal throughput; maximum throughput; neural-fuzzy traffic prediction; random access; reservation access; reservation bandwidth allocation; reservation request traffic; simulation results; throughput performance; unreserved bandwidth; weight-based scheduling policy; Bandwidth; Bit rate; Communication system traffic control; Delay; Frequency; Media Access Protocol; Telecommunication traffic; Throughput; Time division multiple access; Wireless application protocol;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Communications, 2001. ICC 2001. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Helsinki
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7097-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICC.2001.936554
Filename :
936554
Link To Document :
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