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[Keyword] Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)(6hit)

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  • SCTP Tunneling: Flow Aggregation and Burst Transmission to Save Energy for Multiple TCP Flows over a WLAN

    Masafumi HASHIMOTO  Go HASEGAWA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Internet

      Vol:
    E96-B No:10
      Page(s):
    2615-2624

    To raise the energy efficiency of wireless clients, it is important to sleep in idle periods. When multiple network applications are running concurrently on a single wireless client, packets of each application are sent and received independently, but multiplexed at MAC-level. This uncoordinated behavior makes it difficult to control of sleep timing. In addition, frequent state transitions between active and sleep modes consume non-negligible energy. In this paper, we propose a transport-layer approach that resolves this problem and so reduces energy consumed by multiple TCP flows on a wireless LAN (WLAN) client. The proposed method, called SCTP tunneling, has two key features: flow aggregation and burst transmission. It aggregates multiple TCP flows into a single SCTP association between a wireless client and an access point to control packet transmission and reception timing. Furthermore, to improve the sleep efficiency, SCTP tunneling reduces the number of state transitions by handling multiple packets in a bursty fashion. In this study, we construct a mathematical model of the energy consumed by SCTP tunneling to assess its energy efficiency. Through numerical examples, we show that the proposed method can reduce energy consumption by up to 69%.

  • A Transport-Layer Solution for Alleviating TCP Unfairness in a Wireless LAN Environment

    Masafumi HASHIMOTO  Go HASEGAWA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Vol:
    E94-B No:3
      Page(s):
    765-776

    Per-flow unfairness of TCP throughput in the IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN (WLAN) environment has been reported in past literature. A number of researchers have proposed various methods for alleviating the unfairness; most require modification of MAC protocols or queue management mechanisms in access points. However, the MAC protocols of access points are generally implemented at hardware level, so changing these protocols is costly. As the first contribution of this paper, we propose a transport-layer solution for alleviating unfairness among TCP flows, requiring a small modification to TCP congestion control mechanisms only on WLAN stations. In the past literature on fairness issues in the Internet flows, the performance of the proposed solutions for alleviating the unfairness has been evaluated separately from the network bandwidth utilization, meaning that they did not consider the trade-off relationships between fairness and bandwidth utilization. Therefore, as the second contribution of this paper, we introduce a novel performance metric for evaluating trade-off relationships between per-flow fairness and bandwidth utilization at the network bottleneck. We confirm the fundamental characteristics of the proposed method through simulation experiments and evaluate the performance of the proposed method through experiments in real WLAN environments. We show that the proposed method can achieve better a trade-off between fairness and bandwidth utilization, regardless of vendor implementations of wireless access points and wireless interface cards.

  • TCP Congestion Control Mechanisms for Achieving Predictable Throughput Using Inline Network Measurement

    Go HASEGAWA  Kana YAMANEGI  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Network

      Vol:
    E91-B No:12
      Page(s):
    3945-3955

    Recently, real-time media delivery services such as video streaming and VoIP have rapidly become popular. For these applications requiring high-level QoS guarantee, our research group has proposed a transport-layer approach to provide predictable throughput for upper-layer applications. In the present paper, we propose a congestion control mechanism of TCP for achieving predictable throughput. It does not mean we can guarantee the throughput, while we can provide the throughput required by an upper-layer application at high probability when network congestion level is not so high by using the inline network measurement technique for available bandwidth of the network path. We present the evaluation results for the proposed mechanism obtained in simulation and implementation experiments, and confirm that the proposed mechanism can assure a TCP throughput if the required bandwidth is not so high compared to the physical bandwidth, even when other ordinary TCP (e.g., TCP Reno) connections occupy the link.

  • New Methods for Maintaining Fairness between Well-Behaved TCP Flows and Tampered-TCP Flows at Edge Routers

    Junichi MARUYAMA  Go HASEGAWA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER-Transmission Systems and Transmission Equipment for Communications

      Vol:
    E91-B No:1
      Page(s):
    197-206

    In this paper, we propose new methods which detect tampered-TCP connections at edge routers and protect well-behaved TCP connections from tampered-TCP connections, which results in fairness among TCP connections. The proposed methods monitor the TCP packets at an edge router and estimate the window size or the throughput for each TCP connection. By using estimation results, the proposed methods assess whether each TCP connection is tampered or not and drop packets intentionally if necessary to improve the fairness amongst TCP connections. From the results of simulation experiments, we confirm that the proposed methods can accurately identify tampered-TCP connections and regulate throughput ratio between tampered-TCP connections and competing TCP Reno connections to about 1.

  • An Extended Model for TCP Loss Recovery Latency with Random Packet Losses

    Beomjoon KIM  Yong-Hoon CHOI  Jaiyong LEE  

     
    PAPER-Network

      Vol:
    E89-B No:1
      Page(s):
    28-37

    It has been a very important issue to evaluate the performance of transmission control protocol (TCP), and the importance is still growing up because TCP will be deployed more widely in future wireless as well as wireline networks. It is also the reason why there have been a lot of efforts to analyze TCP performance more accurately. Most of these works are focusing on overall TCP end-to-end throughput that is defined as the number of bytes transmitted for a given time period. Even though each TCP's fast recovery strategy should be considered in computation of the exact time period, it has not been considered sufficiently in the existing models. That is, for more detailed performance analysis of a TCP implementation, the fast recovery latency during which lost packets are retransmitted should be considered with its relevant strategy. In this paper, we extend the existing models in order to capture TCP's loss recovery behaviors in detail. On the basis of the model, the loss recovery latency of three TCP implementations can be derived with considering the number of retransmitted packets. In particular, the proposed model differentiates the loss recovery performance of TCP using selective acknowledgement (SACK) option from TCP NewReno. We also verify that the proposed model reflects the precise latency of each TCP's loss recovery by simulations.

  • Survey on Fairness Issues in TCP Congestion Control Mechanisms

    Go HASEGAWA  Masayuki MURATA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E84-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1461-1472

    In this paper, we survey the fairness issues in the congestion control mechanisms of TCP, which is one of most important service aspects in the current and future Internet. We first summarize the problems from a perspective of the fair service among connections. Several solution methods are next surveyed. Those are modifications of TCP congestion control mechanism and router support for achieving the fair service among TCP connections. We finally investigate the fair share of resources at endhosts.