scispace - formally typeset
F

Felicián Németh

Researcher at Budapest University of Technology and Economics

Publications -  42
Citations -  590

Felicián Németh is an academic researcher from Budapest University of Technology and Economics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Service (systems architecture) & Generalized processor sharing. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 41 publications receiving 544 citations.

Papers
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

ESCAPE: extensible service chain prototyping environment using mininet, click, NETCONF and POX

TL;DR: This work implements a similar prototyping system called ESCAPE, which can be used to develop and test various components of the service chaining architecture, and incorporates Click for implementing Virtual Network Functions (VNF), NETCONF for managing Click-based VNFs and POX for taking care of traffic steering.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On QoS Support to Ofelia and OpenFlow

TL;DR: A possible architectural extension to Ofelia is described in order to make it capable of running QoS related experiments and a QoS management platform with full integration into the existing management framework is proposed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Towards Unified Programmability of Cloud and Carrier Infrastructure

TL;DR: A unified programmability framework addressing the unification of network and cloud resources, the integrated control and management of cloud and network, the description for programming networked/cloud services, and the provisioning processes of these services is proposed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

SDN based testbeds for evaluating and promoting multipath TCP

TL;DR: This paper establishes a special purpose control and measurement framework on top of two distinct internet testbeds to conduct end-to-end MPTCP experiments and designs and establishes a publicly available large-scale multipath capable measurement framework.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Nonrate-proportional weighting of generalized processor sharing schedulers

TL;DR: A novel approach to calculate tighter delay bounds than given in the former works of Parekh et al. (1993, 1994) is introduced, which not only allows better utilization of networks resources but supports basis for arbitrary weighting of sessions.