Title :
Multi-timescale Internet traffic engineering
Author :
Mortier, Richard M.
Author_Institution :
Microsoft Res. Ltd., Cambridge, UK
fDate :
10/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The Internet is a collection of packet-based hop-by-hop routed networks. Internet traffic engineering is the process of allocating resources to meet the performance requirements of users and operators for their traffic. Current mechanisms for doing so, exemplified by TCP´s congestion control or the variety of packet marking disciplines, concentrate on allocating resources on a per-packet basis or at data timescales. This article motivates the need for traffic engineering in the Internet at other timescales, namely control and management timescales, and presents three mechanisms for this. It also presents a scenario to show how these mechanisms increase the flexibility of operators´ service offerings and potentially also ease problems of Internet management.
Keywords :
Internet; computer network management; internetworking; packet switching; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; BGP routing protocol; ECN proxy; Internet management; TCP congestion control; admission control; control timescale; multi-timescale Internet traffic engineering; operator services; packet marking disciplines; packet-based hop-by-hop routed networks; resource allocation; Aggregates; Bandwidth; Communication system traffic control; Engineering management; IP networks; Optimization; Protocols; Resource management; Telecommunication traffic; Web and internet services;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MCOM.2002.1039867