Proportional integrator with short-lived flows adjustment
Abstract (Summary)
The number of Web traffic flows dominates Internet traffic today and most Web
interactions are short-lived HTTP connections handled by TCP. Most core Internet
routers use Drop Tail queuing which produces bursts of packet drops that contribute to
unfair service. This thesis introduces two new active queue management (AQM)
algorithms, PISA (PI with Short-lived flows Adjustment) and PIMC (PI with Minimum
Cwnd). These AQMs are built on top of the PI (Proportional Integrator). To evaluate the
performance of PISA and PIMC, a new simple model of HTTP traffic was developed for
the NS-2 simulation. TCP sources inform PISA and PIMC routers of their congestion
window by embedding a source hint in the packet header. Using the congestion window,
PISA drops packets from short-lived Web flows less than packets from long-lived flows.
Using a congestion window, PIMC does not drop a packet when congestion window is
below a fixed threshold. This study provides a series of NS-2 experiments to investigate
the behavior of PISA and PIMC. The results show fewer drops for both PISA and PIMC
that avoids timeouts and increases the rate at which Web objects are sent. PISA and
PIMC improve the performance of HTTP flows significantly over PI. PISA performs
slightly better than PIMC.
i
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Worcester Polytechnic Institute
School Location:USA - Massachusetts
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:computer networks world wide web internet programming queuing theory routers tcp ip network protocol
ISBN:
Date of Publication: