• DocumentCode
    335111
  • Title

    Using back-pressure to improve TCP performance with many flows

  • Author

    Pazos, Carlos M. ; Agrelo, Juan C Sanchez ; Gerla, Mario

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
  • Volume
    2
  • fYear
    1999
  • fDate
    21-25 Mar 1999
  • Firstpage
    431
  • Abstract
    Congestion control of Internet best effort traffic relies mostly on TCP window flow control of individual sessions. This paper argues that such approach does not scale well to a very large number of simultaneously active flows, typical of backbones characterized by large delay-bandwidth products. In this scenario, the TCP window sizes tend to be small and dropping or marking packets alone is not effective to reduce the offered traffic. The analysis presented describes the aggressive TCP dynamics under many flows and suggests that the performance can be improved by applying back-pressure flow control to the aggregate traffic in the backbone. To demonstrated this argument, a link-layer, rate-based, back-pressure mechanism for IP-over-ATM backbones using the ABR service is described. A simulation study of a network with this capability demonstrates the improvement of TCP performance under many flows. The study also considers RED and ECN routers to indicate that these techniques alone are not well positioned to address the many flows scenario either. However, the combination of random early detection (RED) and explicit congestion notification (ECN) routers with back-pressure has the potential to further improve TCP performance
  • Keywords
    Internet; asynchronous transfer mode; performance evaluation; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; ABR service; ECN router; IP-over-ATM backbones; Internet best effort traffic; RED router; TCP performance; TCP window flow control; aggressive TCP dynamics; back-pressure flow control; congestion control; explicit congestion notification; large delay-bandwidth products; link-layer; many flows; random early detection; rate-based back-pressure mechanism; simulation study; window sizes; Aggregates; Bandwidth; Communication system traffic control; Computer science; Delay; Internet; Performance analysis; Spine; Traffic control; Transport protocols;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    INFOCOM '99. Eighteenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies. Proceedings. IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    New York, NY
  • ISSN
    0743-166X
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-5417-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/INFCOM.1999.751375
  • Filename
    751375