DocumentCode
395652
Title
RSVP reservation gaps: problems and solutions
Author
Dharmalingam, Kalaiarul ; Kowalik, Karol ; Collier, Martin
Author_Institution
Res. Inst. in Networks & Commun. Eng., Dublin City Univ., Ireland
Volume
3
fYear
2003
fDate
11-15 May 2003
Firstpage
1590
Abstract
High-end networking applications such as e-commerce, multimedia, distributed data analysis and advanced collaborative environments feature demanding end-to-end quality of service (QoS) requirements. Due to the heterogeneity exhibited by the Internet, a route from source to destination for such a flow may not be available which is comprised exclusively of QoS supporting path segments. Hence the flow must traverse one or more non-QoS path segments referred to here as reservation gaps. In this paper we study the problem of reservation gaps and their impact on QoS and present a solution to address the deficiencies caused by such gaps, using an active network approach based on the mobile agent paradigm. Furthermore, to improve the reliability in path selection and to minimise the influence of reservation gaps along the path of a QoS flow, we propose two routing algorithms, the most reliable shortest path (MS-R) algorithm and the shortest - most reliable path (S-MR) algorithm, that select paths with the minimum number of reservation gaps. The active network based solution we propose works autonomously and scales to large networks such as the Internet. We demonstrate the advantages of such a solution using simulations which compares operational characteristics of QoS flows when traversing non-managed and actively managed reservation gaps. We also demonstrate the benefits of employing a routing algorithm such as MR-S or S-MR that accounts for reservation gaps in place of conventional shortest-path routing algorithms.
Keywords
Internet; mobile agents; quality of service; routing protocols; telecommunication network management; Internet; QoS requirements; active network approach; computer networks; high-end networking applications; mobile agent paradigm; most reliable - shortest path algorithm; path selection; quality of service; reservation gaps; resource reservation protocol; routing algorithms; shortest - most reliable path algorithm; Collaboration; Data analysis; Data engineering; Diffserv networks; Electronic commerce; Electronic mail; IP networks; Quality of service; Routing; Web and internet services;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 2003. ICC '03. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7802-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.2003.1203870
Filename
1203870
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