Paper
1 July 2002 Running integrated services over differentiated service networks: quantitative performance measurements
Haowei Bai, Mohammed Atiquzzaman, William A. Ivancic
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4866, Quality of Service over Next-Generation Internet; (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.473015
Event: ITCom 2002: The Convergence of Information Technologies and Communications, 2002, Boston, MA, United States
Abstract
Integrated Services (IntServ) and Differentiated Services (DiffServ) are two of the current approaches to provide Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees in the next generation Internet. IntServ aims at providing guarantees to end applications (individual connections) which gives rise to scalability issues in the core of the network. On the contrary, DiffServ is designed to provide QoS to aggregates, and does not suffer from scalability. It is therefore, believed that the combination of IntServ at the edge and DiffServ at the core will be able to provide QoS guarantees to end applications. Although there have been several proposals on how to perform mapping of services between IntServ and DiffServ, there hasn't been any study to quantitatively show the level of QoS that can be achieved when the two networks are connected. The of this paper is to quantitatively demonstrate the QoS guarantees that can be obtained by end applications when IntServ is run over DiffServ. We have used goodput, drop ratio and non-conformant ratio of packets from the different services and the queue size of DiffServ router to determine the QoS obtained by packets belonging to different traffic classes.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Haowei Bai, Mohammed Atiquzzaman, and William A. Ivancic "Running integrated services over differentiated service networks: quantitative performance measurements", Proc. SPIE 4866, Quality of Service over Next-Generation Internet, (1 July 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.473015
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Internet

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Receivers

Aerospace engineering

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Computer science

Network architectures

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