DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION

There are many factors that are important in the design of queue management schemes for routers in the Internet: for example, queuing delay, link utilization, packet loss, energy consumption and the impact of router buffer size. By considering a fluid model for the congestion avoidance phase of Addi...

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Main Authors: Ganesh Patil, Sally McClean, Gaurav Raina3
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ICT Academy of Tamil Nadu 2011-06-01
Series:ICTACT Journal on Communication Technology
Subjects:
TCP
Online Access:http://ictactjournals.in/paper/jct_Spl_Paper_339_344.pdf
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spelling doaj-119aed704d784902a26b5a71f1ced6e72020-11-24T21:56:16ZengICT Academy of Tamil NaduICTACT Journal on Communication Technology0976-00912229-69482011-06-0122339344DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATIONGanesh Patil0Sally McClean1Gaurav Raina32Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, IndiaSchool of Computing and Information Engineering, University of Ulster, IrelandDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, IndiaThere are many factors that are important in the design of queue management schemes for routers in the Internet: for example, queuing delay, link utilization, packet loss, energy consumption and the impact of router buffer size. By considering a fluid model for the congestion avoidance phase of Additive Increase Multiplicative Decrease (AIMD) TCP, in a small buffer regime, we argue that stability should also be a desirable feature for network performance. The queue management schemes we study are Drop Tail and Random Early Detection (RED). For Drop Tail, the analytical arguments are based on local stability and bifurcation theory. As the buffer size acts as a bifurcation parameter, variations in it can readily lead to the emergence of limit cycles. We then present NS2 simulations to study the effect of changing buffer size on queue dynamics, utilization, window size and packet loss for three different flow scenarios. The simulations corroborate the analysis which highlights that performance is coupled with the notion of stability. Our work suggests that, in a small buffer regime, a simple Drop Tail queue management serves to enhance stability and appears preferable to the much studied RED scheme.http://ictactjournals.in/paper/jct_Spl_Paper_339_344.pdfTCPQueue ManagementSmall BuffersPerformance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ganesh Patil
Sally McClean
Gaurav Raina3
spellingShingle Ganesh Patil
Sally McClean
Gaurav Raina3
DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
ICTACT Journal on Communication Technology
TCP
Queue Management
Small Buffers
Performance
author_facet Ganesh Patil
Sally McClean
Gaurav Raina3
author_sort Ganesh Patil
title DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
title_short DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
title_full DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
title_fullStr DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
title_full_unstemmed DROP TAIL AND RED QUEUE MANAGEMENT WITH SMALL BUFFERS:STABILITY AND HOPF BIFURCATION
title_sort drop tail and red queue management with small buffers:stability and hopf bifurcation
publisher ICT Academy of Tamil Nadu
series ICTACT Journal on Communication Technology
issn 0976-0091
2229-6948
publishDate 2011-06-01
description There are many factors that are important in the design of queue management schemes for routers in the Internet: for example, queuing delay, link utilization, packet loss, energy consumption and the impact of router buffer size. By considering a fluid model for the congestion avoidance phase of Additive Increase Multiplicative Decrease (AIMD) TCP, in a small buffer regime, we argue that stability should also be a desirable feature for network performance. The queue management schemes we study are Drop Tail and Random Early Detection (RED). For Drop Tail, the analytical arguments are based on local stability and bifurcation theory. As the buffer size acts as a bifurcation parameter, variations in it can readily lead to the emergence of limit cycles. We then present NS2 simulations to study the effect of changing buffer size on queue dynamics, utilization, window size and packet loss for three different flow scenarios. The simulations corroborate the analysis which highlights that performance is coupled with the notion of stability. Our work suggests that, in a small buffer regime, a simple Drop Tail queue management serves to enhance stability and appears preferable to the much studied RED scheme.
topic TCP
Queue Management
Small Buffers
Performance
url http://ictactjournals.in/paper/jct_Spl_Paper_339_344.pdf
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