Publication: Traffic behavior of scalable multicast: self-similarity and protocol dependence
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
N/A
Advisor
Publication Date
2003
Language
English
Type
Conference proceeding
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
The development of high-speed networks and the expansion of the Internet have increased both geographical extent and participant population of applications such as videoconferencing, multimedia dissemination, electronic stock exchange, and distributed cooperative work. The key property of this type of applications is the need to distribute data among multiple participants together with application specific quality of service needs which fact makes multicast protocols an essential underlying communication structure. In this paper, we analyze traffic characteristics of two scalable multicast protocols, namely Bimodal Multicast (Pbcast) and Scalable Reliable Multicast (SRM), each having different approaches for loss recovery and providing reliability. Particularly, our simulation studies demonstrate that epidemic approach of Bimodal Multicast generates a more desirable traffic than SRM with lower overhead traffic and transport delays. SRM delays show long-range dependence and self-similarity whereas Bimodal Multicast delays are shortrange dependent. Self-similarity and long-range dependence are ubiquitous in wide area networks, which lead to adverse consequences in network performance. We elaborate on the protocol mechanisms as the underlying factor in our empirical results. The intrinsic relation of these mechanisms to traffic characteristics is explored.
Description
Source:
Providing Quality of Service in Heterogeneous Environments, Vols 5a and 5b
Publisher:
Elsevier Science Bv
Keywords:
Subject
Computer science, Information systems, Telecommunications