• DocumentCode
    3596110
  • Title

    Channel reservation protocol for over-subscribed channels and destinations

  • Author

    Michelogiannakis, George ; Nan Jiang ; Becker, Daniel ; Dally, William J.

  • Author_Institution
    Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    12
  • Abstract
    Channels in system-wide networks tend to be over-subscribed due to the cost of bandwidth and increasing traffic demands. To make matters worse, workloads can overstress specific destinations, creating hotspots. Lossless networks offer attractive advantages compared to lossy networks but suffer from tree saturation. This led to the development of explicit congestion notification (ECN). However, ECN is very sensitive to its configuration parameters and acts only after congestion forms. We propose channel reservation protocol (CRP) to enable sources to reserve bandwidth in multiple resources in advance of packet transmission and with a single request, but without idling resources like circuit switching. CRP prevents congestion from ever occurring and thus reacts instantly to traffic changes, whereas ECN requires 300,000 cycles to stabilize in our experiments. Furthermore, ECN may not prevent congestion formed by short-lived flows generated by a large combination of source-destination pairs.
  • Keywords
    computer networks; protocols; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication switching; telecommunication traffic; CRP; ECN; channel reservation protocol; circuit switching; explicit congestion notification; hotspots; lossless networks; lossy networks; over-subscribed channels; packet transmission; short-lived flows; source-destination pairs; system-wide networks; traffic changes; tree saturation; workloads; Abstracts; Bandwidth; Clocks; Congestion control; congestion notification; large-scale networks; reservation protocol; tree saturation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC), 2013 International Conference for
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4503-2378-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1145/2503210.2503213
  • Filename
    6877485