scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of tcp enhancements for last-hop wireless networks

TLDR
The objective is to review the performance issues of TCP variations, when employed in last-hop wireless networks, and to provide a categorized analysis of different existing solutions comparatively, as it is difficult to create a “one size fits all” TCP for last-hops wireless networks.
Abstract
TCP continues to be an important transport-layer communication protocol that is typically tuned to perform well in traditional wired networks, where bit error rate (BER) is low and congestion is the primary cause of packet loss. The emergence of various mobile access networks has prompted researchers to look for suitable modifications to TCP so as to make it survive in the wireless era as well. Networks with wireless links and mobile hosts incur significant losses due to high BER, host motion, and handoff mechanisms. Mobile devices face temporary and unannounced loss of network connectivity when they move. They are likely to have scarce resources, and they react to frequent changes in the environment. Motion causes varying, increased delays and packet losses, while the network learns how to deliver packets to the new location of the host. TCP incorrectly interprets these delays and losses as signs of network congestion and throttles its transmission rate, causing degraded end-to-end performance. This article provides an in-depth survey of various TCP enhancements which are specifically targeted for last-hop wireless environments. The objective is to review the performance issues of TCP variations, when employed in last-hop wireless networks, and to provide a categorized analysis of different existing solutions comparatively, as we all know that it is difficult to create a “one size fits all” TCP for last-hop wireless networks.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book

Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach

TL;DR: Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach Featuring the Internet explains the engineering problems that are inherent in communicating digital information from point to point, and presents the mathematics that determine the best path, show some code that implements those algorithms, and illustrate the logic by using excellent conceptual diagrams.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transmission control protocol (TCP) in wireless networks: issues, approaches, and challenges

TL;DR: The taxonomy and characteristics of wireless networks, and problems for TCP in wireless communications are introduced, and various representative algorithms which preserve the end-to-end semantics are examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Multihoming Issues Using the Stream Control Transmission Protocol

TL;DR: This paper investigates state-of-the-art multihoming techniques using SCTP, namely: handover management, concurrent multipath transfer (CMT), and cross-layer activities, which may offer sufficient results and many open problems still remain.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Performance of Transport Control Protocol Over Dynamic Spectrum Access Links

TL;DR: The authors' simulations show that modern TCPs can efficiently make use of the dynamic capacity of DSA links for bulk data transmission, under a wide range of conditions, but only if certain requirements are met.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Video adaptation proxy for wireless Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP

TL;DR: Simulation results verify that WiDASH proxy is able to improve QoE by providing smoother video streams with higher average visual quality for wireless HTTP video streaming.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Congestion avoidance and control

TL;DR: The measurements and the reports of beta testers suggest that the final product is fairly good at dealing with congested conditions on the Internet, and an algorithm recently developed by Phil Karn of Bell Communications Research is described in a soon-to-be-published RFC.

TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options

TL;DR: TCP may experience poor performance when multiple packets are lost from one window of data because of the limited information available from cumulative acknowledgments.
Journal ArticleDOI

TCP Vegas: end to end congestion avoidance on a global Internet

TL;DR: The three key techniques employed by Vegas are described, and the results of a comprehensive experimental performance study, using both simulations and measurements on the Internet, of the Vegas and Reno implementations of TCP are presented.

The NewReno Modification to TCP's Fast Recovery Algorithm

TL;DR: The purpose of this document is to advance NewReno TCP's Fast Retransmit and Fast Recovery algorithms in RFC 2582 from Experimental to Standards Track status.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of mechanisms for improving TCP performance over wireless links

TL;DR: The results show that a reliable link-layer protocol that is TCP-aware provides very good performance and it is possible to achieve good performance without splitting the end-to-end connection at the base station.
Related Papers (5)