Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., State Univ. of New York, Stony Brook, NY, USA
Abstract :
This paper compares Reno, new-Reno and selective acknowledgements (SACK), the three most common TCP implementations today in (future) optical burst switched (OBS) networks. In general, SACK, which considers multiple triple duplicated ACKed (TD) losses in one round, is found to perform best in OBS networks, while new-Reno, which improves Reno in packet switched networks by fast retransmission in responding to partial ACKs, may however perform worse than Reno. All three TCP implementations react to a time out (TO) loss in the same way (i.e., using slow start). In OBS networks, where a burst may contain all packets from one round, and a burst loss occurs mainly due to contention instead of buffer overflow, such a TO event may no longer imply heavy congestion, or in other words, it may he a false TO or FTO. Such FTOs, which may he common in OBS networks especially for fast TCP flows, can significantly degrade the performance of all existing TCP implementations. Accordingly, we also propose a new TCP implementation called burst TCP (BTCP) which can detect FTOs and react properly, and as a result, improve over the existing TCP implementations significantly.
Keywords :
optical fibre networks; packet switching; transport protocols; OBS networks; TCP implementations; burst TCP; false time out detection; optical burst switched networks; packet switched networks; selective acknowledgements; transport control protocol; Computer science; Degradation; Intelligent networks; Internet; Optical burst switching; Optical fiber networks; Optical packet switching; Spine; TCPIP; Wavelength division multiplexing;