DocumentCode
335142
Title
Re-examining maxmin protocols: a fundamental study on convergence, complexity, variations, and performance
Author
Tsai, Wei K. ; Kim, Yuseok
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., California Univ., Irvine, CA, USA
Volume
2
fYear
1999
fDate
21-25 Mar 1999
Firstpage
811
Abstract
This paper re-examines maxmin protocols for ABR traffic in ATM networks in four aspects: convergence, complexity, variations, and performance. First, the concept of “pseudo-saturation” is introduced. Most, if not all, protocols do not properly handle pseudo-saturated links, and as a result, there is no guarantee for convergence to true maxmin solutions. Second, the concept of “constraint precedence graph (CPG)” is introduced and is used to define the best possible time complexity of any maxmin protocol. The existing complexity estimates are overly conservative because they do not consider possible concurrent operations. In contrast, the CPG analysis explicitly accounts for parallelization. Third, the concept of “constraint” is generalized and this generalization is used to derive an optimality condition for the maxmin problem with nonzero minimum cell rate (MCR) requirements. This optimality condition can be used in conjunction with any maxmin protocol to handle the nonzero MCR requirements without adding excessive complexity. Finally, simulations suggest that the complexity analysis is inadequate to gauge protocol performance. A new analysis based on protocol dynamics is called for to understand the performance
Keywords
asynchronous transfer mode; computational complexity; convergence of numerical methods; graph theory; minimax techniques; protocols; telecommunication traffic; ABR traffic; ATM networks; complexity analysis; complexity estimates; constraint precedence graph; convergence; maxmin problem; maxmin protocols; nonzero minimum cell rate; optimality condition; parallelization; performance; protocol dynamics; protocol performance; pseudo-saturated links; simulations; time complexity; variations; Analytical models; Bandwidth; Communication system traffic control; Computational modeling; Convergence; Intserv networks; Performance analysis; Protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Virtual colonoscopy;
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.1999.751469
Filename
751469
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