• DocumentCode
    303775
  • Title

    ATM networks: bandwidth allocation and congestion control

  • Author

    Gerla, M. ; Cavendish, D. ; Mascolo, S.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    1996
  • fDate
    13-16 May 1996
  • Firstpage
    27
  • Abstract
    ATM provides a very high speed network infrastructure suitable for local, campus and wide area networks, capable of supporting a broad range of applications. There are still several areas of ATM which require further work. One such area is bandwidth allocation. In essence, bandwidth allocation is required in order to guarantee performance for real time traffic connections (e.g. voice and video). On the one hand, peak bandwidth allocation is inefficient. On the other, “statistical” bandwidth allocation is very difficult, especially in a heterogeneous traffic environment. In this paper, we introduce a bandwidth allocation technique based on virtual private networks, which can overcome some of these problems. Another critical area in ATM is congestion control of “best effort” traffic, i.e. traffic which is not allocated any bandwidth, rather, it “fills in” the bandwidth left over by the guaranteed traffic. Hence the name of ABR (available bit rate) traffic. ABR traffic must be flow controlled at the source, to avoid congestion in the ATM network. In this paper, we present a feedback control algorithm for ABR traffic in which source rates are adjusted according to virtual circuit queue levels at intermediate nodes along the path. We propose a simple and classical proportional controller, plus a Smith predictor to overcome instabilities due to large propagation delays. This scheme outperforms the proportional rate control algorithm
  • Keywords
    asynchronous transfer mode; feedback; queueing theory; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication traffic; visual communication; voice communication; ATM networks; Smith predictor; available bit rate traffic; bandwidth allocation; best effort traffic; congestion control; feedback control algorithm; instabilities; intermediate nodes; performance; propagation delays; proportional controller; real time traffic connections; source rates; video; virtual circuit queue levels; virtual private networks; voice; Bandwidth; Bit rate; Channel allocation; Communication system traffic control; High-speed networks; Proportional control; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control; Virtual private networks; Wide area networks;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Electrotechnical Conference, 1996. MELECON '96., 8th Mediterranean
  • Conference_Location
    Bari
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-3109-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MELCON.1996.550957
  • Filename
    550957