Title :
A bandwidth allocation protocol for MPEG VBR traffic in ATM networks
Author :
El-Henaoui, Sherif ; Coelho, Rosangela ; Tohme, Samir
Author_Institution :
Ecole Nat. Superieure des Telecommun., Paris, France
Abstract :
A periodic allocation protocol, called anticipated traffic allocation protocol (ATAP) for real time VBR traffic is proposed. The main objective of this protocol is to dynamically allocate the available bandwidth to real-time VBR sources, i.e. to be more efficient than the CBR allocation and at the same time more secure that the “walk-in” allocation. The ATAP unit is located at the network entry node between the real-time encoder and the applied bandwidth allocation protocol in the network, the fast reservation protocol FRP/DT. This reservation protocol cannot satisfy the real-time requirements, since the source would have to wait at least a round trip delay to reserve a required bandwidth increase. Hence, the ATAP proposes to anticipate and allocate the bandwidth one period in advance. This permits the encoder to adjust its coding bit rate according to the network loading condition. Doing so, a congestion will gracefully degrade the subjective quality of the signal, instead of “blindly” loosing cells at the network entry node. A minimum bit rate negotiated at the connection set-up is always guaranteed to assure the connection continuity in the case of the case of bandwidth reservation refusal. On the network side, the ATAP interacts with the FRP/DT. Reservation failures are used as congestion indicators to control the entering traffic and to adjust the cell priority. A simulation analysis investigates the performance of the ATAP and its interaction with the FRP/DT for two real MPEG VBR audio sequences under different bit rate anticipation approaches
Keywords :
asynchronous transfer mode; audio coding; code standards; prediction theory; protocols; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication networks; telecommunication standards; ATAP unit; ATM networks; FRP/DT; MPEG VBR audio sequences; MPEG VBR traffic; anticipated traffic allocation protocol; bandwidth allocation protocol; bandwidth reservation refusal; bit rate anticipation; cell priority; coding bit rate; dynamic bandwidth allocation; fast reservation protocol; network entry node; network loading condition; performance; periodic allocation protocol; real time VBR traffic; real-time encoder; reservation failures; simulation analysis; traffic congestion control; Analytical models; Bandwidth; Bit rate; Channel allocation; Communication system traffic control; Degradation; Fiber reinforced plastics; Protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM '96. Fifteenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer Societies. Networking the Next Generation. Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7293-5
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.1996.493053