An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class

Includes bibliographical references. === One of the service classes offered by Diffserv is the Assured Forwarding (AF) class. Because of scalability concerns, IETF specifications recommend that microflow and aggregate-unaware active buffer management mechanisms such as RIO (Random early detecLion wi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mentz, Joshua
Other Authors: Ventura, Neco
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/5162
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-51622021-09-16T05:08:52Z An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class Mentz, Joshua Ventura, Neco Education Includes bibliographical references. One of the service classes offered by Diffserv is the Assured Forwarding (AF) class. Because of scalability concerns, IETF specifications recommend that microflow and aggregate-unaware active buffer management mechanisms such as RIO (Random early detecLion with ln/Out-ofprofile) be used in the core of Diffserv networks implementing AF. Such mechanisms have, however, been shown to provide poor performance with regard to fairness, stability and network controL Furthermore, recent advances in router technology now allow routers to implement more advanced scheduling and buffer management mechanisms on high-speed ports. This thesis evaluates the performance improvements that may be realized when implementing the Diffserv AF core using a hierarchical microflow and aggregate aware buffer management mechanism instead of RIO. The author motivates, proposes and specifies such a mechanism. The mechanism. referred to as H-MAQ or Hierarchical multi drop-precedence queue state Microflow-Aware Quelling, is evaluated on a testbed that compares the performance of a RIO network core with an H-MAQ network core. 2014-07-31T10:54:45Z 2014-07-31T10:54:45Z 2003 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/5162 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Electrical Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Education
spellingShingle Education
Mentz, Joshua
An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
description Includes bibliographical references. === One of the service classes offered by Diffserv is the Assured Forwarding (AF) class. Because of scalability concerns, IETF specifications recommend that microflow and aggregate-unaware active buffer management mechanisms such as RIO (Random early detecLion with ln/Out-ofprofile) be used in the core of Diffserv networks implementing AF. Such mechanisms have, however, been shown to provide poor performance with regard to fairness, stability and network controL Furthermore, recent advances in router technology now allow routers to implement more advanced scheduling and buffer management mechanisms on high-speed ports. This thesis evaluates the performance improvements that may be realized when implementing the Diffserv AF core using a hierarchical microflow and aggregate aware buffer management mechanism instead of RIO. The author motivates, proposes and specifies such a mechanism. The mechanism. referred to as H-MAQ or Hierarchical multi drop-precedence queue state Microflow-Aware Quelling, is evaluated on a testbed that compares the performance of a RIO network core with an H-MAQ network core.
author2 Ventura, Neco
author_facet Ventura, Neco
Mentz, Joshua
author Mentz, Joshua
author_sort Mentz, Joshua
title An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
title_short An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
title_full An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
title_fullStr An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the Diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
title_sort investigation into buffer management mechanisms for the diffserv assured forwarding traffic class
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/5162
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