DocumentCode :
380639
Title :
Increase-decrease congestion control for real-time streaming: scalability
Author :
Loguinov, Dmitri ; Radha, Hayder
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., City Univ. of New York, NY, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2002
fDate :
2002
Firstpage :
525
Abstract :
Typically, NACK-based congestion control is dismissed as being not viable due to the common notion that "open-loop" congestion control is simply "difficult." Emerging real-time streaming applications, however, often rely on rate-based flow control and would benefit greatly from scalable NACK-based congestion control. This paper sheds new light on the performance of NACK-based congestion control and measures the amount of "difficulty" inherently present in such protocols. We specifically focus on increase-decrease (I-D) congestion control methods for real-time, rate-based streaming. First, we introduce and study several new performance measures that can be used to analyze the class of general I-D congestion control methods. These measures include monotonicity of convergence to fairness and packet-loss scalability (explained in the paper). Second, under the assumptions that the only feedback from the network is packet loss, we show that AIMD is the only TCP-friendly method with monotonic convergence to fairness. Furthermore, we find that AIMD possesses the best packet-loss scalability among all TCP-friendly binomial schemes and show how poorly all of the existing methods scale as the number of flows is increased. Third, we show that if the flows can obtain the knowledge of an additional network parameter (i.e., the bottleneck bandwidth), the scalability of AIMD can be substantially improved. We conclude the paper by studying the performance of a new scheme, called ideally-scalable congestion control (ISCC), both in simulation and a NACK-based MPEG-4 streaming application over a Cisco testbed.
Keywords :
packet switching; probability; telecommunication congestion control; transport protocols; Cisco testbed; NACK-based MPEG-4 streaming application; NACK-based congestion control; TCP-friendly method; bottleneck bandwidth; convergence monotonicity; feedback; general I-D congestion control methods; ideally-scalable congestion control; increase-decrease congestion control; network parameter; open-loop congestion control; packet-loss scalability; performance measures; protocols; rate-based streaming; real-time streaming; real-time streaming applications; simulation; Bandwidth; Convergence; Feedback; Lighting control; MPEG 4 Standard; Open loop systems; Performance analysis; Protocols; Scalability; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM 2002. Twenty-First Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies. Proceedings. IEEE
ISSN :
0743-166X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7476-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.2002.1019297
Filename :
1019297
Link To Document :
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