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The Stutter Go Back-N ARQ Protocol

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TLDR
The average queue length for an idealized ARQ protocol for such an environment characterized by high error rates and/or long propagation delays is derived and it is shown that for the case of low message traffic rates, the modified Go Back- N protocol approaches the idealized scheme in performance.
Abstract
In this paper we consider the problem of designing a good ARQ protocol for a message transmission environment characterized by high error rates and/or long propagation delays. We derive the average queue length for an idealized ARQ protocol for such an environment. We also describe a modification that can be made to existing ARQ protocols which can significantly decrease queue lengths in such an environment. We show that for the case of low message traffic rates, the modified Go Back- N protocol approaches the idealized scheme in performance.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Point-To-Multipoint Communication Over Broadcast Links

TL;DR: A relatively simple protocol is studied which is easy to implement and performs very well under a wide range of conditions and is shown to perform considerably better than the other go-back- N protocols, particularly in environments with a large number of receivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance Analysis of the Selective Repeat ARQ Protocol

TL;DR: This paper presents two different methods for the queue length and delay analysis of the basic selective-repeat ARQ protocol, modeled as a discrete time queue with infinite buffer storage.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Throughput Performance of Some Continuous ARQ Strategies with Repeated Transmissions

TL;DR: The paper considers a class of continuous ARQ strategies, whereby multiple copies of each data block are sent contiguously (instead of one single copy), and whereby the data blocks are delivered at the receiver side in their order of arrival at the transmitter.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Analysis of Some Selective-Repeat ARQ Schemes with Finite Receiver Buffer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed a class of mixed-mode ARQ protocol models which incorporate a selective-repeat mode with finite receiver buffer and showed that it is desirable for best throughput performance in practical systems that at least the first retransmission of a block following an error should be in the selectiverepeat mode to obtain superior performance over GoBack N schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Queueing Analysis of Two ARQ Protocols

TL;DR: A queueing analysis of the two ARQ (automatic repeat request) protocols-block and select ARQ-for a (slotted) concentrator network node is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Statistical Analysis of Queue Lengths and Waiting Times for Statistical Multiplexers with ARQ Retransmission Schemes

TL;DR: A model is developed which describes the statistical behavior of the multiplexer using these error detection and retransmission schemes and is applied to the case where errors are independent and can occur during data and/or acknowledgment transmission.
Journal ArticleDOI

An analysis of the effectiveness of hybrid transmission schemes

TL;DR: It is shown that a probability of undetected error of less than 10-9 error/bit, can be achieved by correcting only a few errors while retaining a reasonable throughput and a very low retransmission rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Analytic Evaluation of the Performance of the "Send and Wait" Protocol

TL;DR: This study first analyzes the influence of the time-out on the packet transmission rate, then uses a queuing analysis to obtain the ergodicity condition and to compute the buffer queue length probability distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid Error Control Using Retransmission and Generalized Burst-Trapping Codes

TL;DR: A hybrid scheme with Go Back N ARQ as the retransmission component andGBT code as the FEC component is described and its performance is analyzed in terms of throughput efficiency and undetected error probability and is compared with that of a forward-acting GBT code.
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