Title : 
Protocol architectures for delivering application specific quality of service
         
        
            Author : 
Jain, Parag K. ; Hutchinson, Norman C. ; Chanson, Sadmuel T.
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Dept. of Comput. Sci., British Columbia Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
         
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
With the advent of high speed networks, the future communication environment is expected to comprise a variety of networks with widely varying characteristics. The next generation multimedia applications require transfer of a wide variety of data such as voice, video, graphics, and text which have widely varying access patterns such as interactive, bulk transfer, and real-time guarantees. Traditional protocol architectures have difficulty in supporting multimedia applications and high-speed networks because they are neither designed nor implemented for such a diverse communication environment. In this paper, we analyze the drawbacks of traditional protocol architectures and propose two alternative architectures for the next generation high-speed network environment: Direct Application Association and Integrated Layered Logical Multiplexing. We implement sample protocol stacks for each of the above models using the most widely used protocol stack (TCP/UDP-IP-Ethernet) in the context of the x-kernel. The performance of these protocol architectures is shown to be comparable to that of a traditional protocol architecture. They win by enabling the key requirements (Application specific Quality of Service) and optimizations (Integrated Layer Processing) necessary for future communication environments
         
        
            Keywords : 
computer networks; multimedia systems; performance evaluation; protocols; Direct Application Association; Integrated Layered Logical Multiplexing; application specific; high speed networks; high-speed network; multimedia; multimedia applications; protocol architectures; protocol stack; quality of service; x-kernel; Access protocols; Application software; Asynchronous transfer mode; Communication networks; Computer architecture; Computer networks; Computer science; High-speed networks; Quality of service; Video on demand;
         
        
        
        
            Conference_Titel : 
Network Protocols, 1995. Proceedings., 1995 International Conference on
         
        
            Conference_Location : 
Tokyo
         
        
            Print_ISBN : 
0-8186-7216-1
         
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/ICNP.1995.524847