DocumentCode :
2562878
Title :
The Ethernet capture effect: analysis and solution
Author :
Ramakrishnan, K.K. ; Yang, Henry
Author_Institution :
Distributed Syst. Archit. & Performance, Digital Equipment Corp., Littleton, MA, USA
fYear :
1994
fDate :
1994
Firstpage :
228
Lastpage :
240
Abstract :
We analyze the behavior of the Ethernet in networks with a small number of active stations, and describe what is known as the Ethernet capture effect. Where a station transmits consecutive packets exclusively for a prolonged period despite other stations contending for access. The capture effect causes transient unfairness, which results in substantial performance degradation. We report measurements using TCP/IP that show the performance degradation. A solution is proposed that effectively overcomes the capture effect. The proposed algorithm, which we call the capture avoidance binary exponential backoff (CABEB), uses the standard binary exponential backoff (BEB) with enhancements for collision resolution in the special case when a station attempts to capture the channel subsequent to an uninterrupted consecutive transmit. Using a detailed simulation, we show the efficacy of the CABEB algorithm over the standard BEB in overcoming the unfairness resulting from stations capturing the channel. The CABEB improves throughput for protocols like TCP/IP, reduces variability in the channel access latency and eliminates packet discards due to excessive collisions in a 2-node network. The algorithm is a modification that is compliant with the Ethernet/802.3 standards. For networks with a large number of active stations, the CABEB performs as well as the standard BEB algorithm. Our study placer emphasis on the workload and network configuration that is the worst case relative to the Ethernet capture effect to show that the proposed algorithm is a substantial improvement over the existing backoff algorithm
Keywords :
local area networks; performance evaluation; transport protocols; 2-node network; Ethernet capture effect; Ethernet/802.3 standards; TCP/IP; active stations; analysis; capture avoidance binary exponential backoff; channel access latency; collision resolution; excessive collisions; network configuration; networks; packet discards; performance degradation; protocols; simulation; solution; standard binary exponential backoff; transient unfairness; uninterrupted consecutive transmit; workload; Access protocols; Computer networks; Degradation; Delay; Ethernet networks; Network servers; Performance analysis; Robustness; Spine; Throughput;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Local Computer Networks, 1994. Proceedings., 19th Conference on
Conference_Location :
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6680-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/LCN.1994.386597
Filename :
386597
Link To Document :
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