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Book ChapterDOI

Design and Implementation of Scalable Admission Control

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TLDR
This paper designs and implements a novel architecture and admission control algorithm termed Egress Admission Control, and describes the implementation of the scheme on a network of prototype routers enhanced with ingress-egress path monitoring and edge admission control.
Abstract
While the IntServ solution to Internet QoS can achieve a strong service model that guarantees flow throughputs and loss rates, it places excessive burdens on high-speed core routers to signal, schedule, and manage state for individual flows. Alternatively, the DiffServ solution achieves scalability via aggregate control, yet cannot ensure a particular QoS to individual flows. To simultaneously achieve scalability and a strong service model, we have designed and implemented a novel architecture and admission control algorithm termed Egress Admission Control. In our approach, the available service on a network path is passively monitored, and admission control is performed only at egress nodes, incorporating the effects of cross traffic with implicit measurements rather than with explicit signaling. In this paper, we describe our implementation of the scheme on a network of prototype routers enhanced with ingress-egress path monitoring and edge admission control. We report the results of testbed experiments and demonstrate the feasibility of an edge-based architecture for providing IntServ-like services in a scalable way.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement-based admission control with aggregate traffic envelopes

TL;DR: A new approach to measurement-based admission control for multiclass networks with link sharing is introduced, which employs adaptive and measurement- based maximal rate envelopes of the aggregate traffic flow to provide a general and accurate traffic characterization that captures its temporal correlation as well as the available statistical multiplexing gain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scalable services via egress admission control

TL;DR: A scalable architecture and algorithm for quality-of-service management termed egress admission control is developed, which allows for cross traffic that cannot be directly measured, and scheduling policies that may be ill-described across many network nodes.
Journal Article

An implementation-based comparison of Measurement-Based Admission Control algorithms

TL;DR: The results of this paper illustrate the independence of traffic from admission control behaviour in the homogeneous traffic environment and highlight the importance of estimators being robust to statistical variation in measurements and offering calibrated controls.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Measuring service in multi-class networks

TL;DR: This work develops a framework and methodology for enabling network clients to assess a system's multi-class mechanisms and parameters and describes the important role of time scales in such a framework.
Proceedings Article

Achieving Flow Level QoS in Cut-Through Networks Through Admission Control and DiffServ.

TL;DR: This paper sets out to achieve flow level QoS using flow aware admission control in combination with a flow negligent DiffServ inspired QoS mechanism and shows that flow level bandwidth guarantees are achievable with the use of the Link-by-Link and the Probe based schemes.
References
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An Architecture for Differentiated Service

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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-similarity through high-variability: statistical analysis of Ethernet LAN traffic at the source level

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a plausible physical explanation for the occurrence of self-similarity in local-area network (LAN) traffic, based on convergence results for processes that exhibit high variability and is supported by detailed statistical analyzes of real-time traffic measurements from Ethernet LANs at the level of individual sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

RSVP: a new resource ReSerVation Protocol

TL;DR: The resource reservation protocol (RSVP) as discussed by the authors is a receiver-oriented simplex protocol that provides receiver-initiated reservations to accommodate heterogeneity among receivers as well as dynamic membership changes.

A Two-bit Differentiated Services Architecture for the Internet

TL;DR: The forwarding path portion of this document is intended as a record of where the IETF was at in late 1997 and not as an indication of future direction.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Providing guaranteed services without per flow management

TL;DR: The key technique is called Dynamic Packet State (DPS), which provides a lightweight and robust mechanism for routers to coordinate actions and implement distributed algorithms and an implementation of the proposed algorithms that has minimum incompatibility with IPv4.