报告简介:
Delay-insensitive applications, such as P2P file sharing, generate
substantial amounts of traffic and compete with
other applications on an equal footing when using TCP. Further, to
optimize throughput, such applications open
multiple connections. This results in an unfair and potentially poor
service for other applications having stringent
performance objectives. In this paper, we propose NF-TCP, a TCP variant
for P2P and similar background delay-
insensitive applications. NF-TCP aims to be submissive to
delay-sensitive applications under congestion. It is
designed to be network friendly based on a fluid flow model for
intermediate queues and uses explicit congestion
notification (ECN) for early detection of congestion. Moreover, it
exploits the measure of the available bandwidth
to be able to aggressively utilize spare capacity. We implemented NF-TCP
on Linux and ns-2. Our evaluations of
the NF-TCP Linux implementation on ns-2 show that NF-TCP outperforms
other network friendly approaches
(e.g., LEDBAT, TCP-LP and RAPID). NF-TCP achieves high utilization, fair
bandwidth allocation among NF-
TCP flows and maintains a small average queue. Our evaluations further
demonstrate that with NF-TCP, the
available bandwidth can be efficiently utilized for supporting both
delay-sensitive and insensitive traffic in a wide
range of scenarios.
报告人简介:
Prof. Fu obtained his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from Tsinghua University in 2000. After
that he worked at Technical University Berlin as a full-time researcher. In 2002, he joined the
faculty of the University of G?ttingen, where he is currently a Full Professor and Dean for Studies
of Computer Science. Prof. Fu has been a Specialist Task Force Expert at ETSI, a Visiting Scientist
at the University of Cambridge, a DAAD Visiting Professor at Columbia University and a Fulbright
Visiting Professor at UCLA, and holds a Changjiang Professorship at Tsinghua. He is the recipient
of the University of G?ttingen's Foundation Council Award for Exceptional Publications by Young
Scholars (2005). He has served as chair or member of organization or program committees for
ACM MOBICOM, MOBIHOC, MobiArch, HotPlanet, IEEE INFOCOM, ICNP, ICDCS, IWQoS,
ICCCN, Globecom, CCW, IFIP Networking etc, and since 2010 as vice chair for the IEEE
Communications Society Technical Committee on Computer Communications (TCCC). He has
served as an area editor of Computer Communications Journal (Elsevier), and as the leading guest
editor for IEEE Network Special Issue on Implications and Control of Middleboxes in the Internet
and Computer Networks (Elsevier) Special Issue on Measurement-based Optimization of P2P
Networking and Applications. He is a senior member of IEEE, and a member of ACM. His research
areas include architecture, protocols and applications of Internet-based communication systems.