DocumentCode :
335147
Title :
An architecture for noncooperative QoS provision in many-switch systems
Author :
Chen, Shaogang ; Park, Kihong
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
1999
fDate :
21-25 Mar 1999
Firstpage :
864
Abstract :
With the proliferation of high-speed networks and networked services, provisioning differentiated services to a diverse user base with heterogeneous QoS requirements has become an important problem. The traditional approach of resource reservation and admission control provides both guarantees and graded services, however, at the cost of potentially underutilized resources and limited scalability. We describe a WAN QoS provision architecture that adaptively organizes best-effort bandwidth into stratified services with graded QoS properties such that the QoS needs of a diverse user base can be effectively met. This architecture-SBS (stratified best-effort service)-promotes a simple user/simple network realization where neither the user nor the network is burdened with complex computational responsibilities. SBS is scalable, efficient, and adaptive, and it complements the guaranteed service architecture, sharing a common network substrate comprised of GPS routers. It is also a functional complement, provisioning QoS efficiently commensurate with user needs, albeit at the cost of weaker protection. SBS is suited to noncooperative network environments where users behave selfishly and resource contention resolution is mediated by the principle of competitive interaction. A principal feature of SBS is the transformation of user-centric QoS provision mechanisms-a defining characteristic of competitive interaction entailing intimate user control of internal network resources-into network-centric mechanisms while preserving the former´s resource allocation paradigm. End-to-end QoS control is facilitated by decentralized control based on Lagrangian optimization-achieve a target end-to-end QoS at minimum cost or resource usage-which, in turn, is amenable to distributed implementation. SBS achieves per-flow QoS control with zero per-flow state at routers and a packet header whose size is independent of hop count. SBS, in spite of foregoing both resource reservation and admission control, is able to provision stable, graded QoS
Keywords :
decentralised control; optimisation; packet switching; quality of service; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; wide area networks; GPS routers; Lagrangian optimization; WAN QoS provision architecture; adaptive service; admission control; competitive interaction; distributed implementation; graded services; guaranteed service architecture; heterogeneous QoS requirements; high-speed networks; many-switch systems; networked services; noncooperative QoS provision; noncooperative network environments; packet header size; per-flow QoS control; resource allocation paradigm; resource contention resolution; resource reservation; scalable service; stratified best-effort service; zero per-flow state; Admission control; Bandwidth; Computer architecture; Computer networks; Cost function; Global Positioning System; High-speed networks; Protection; Scalability; Wide area networks;
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.1999.751475
Filename :
751475
Link To Document :
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