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TCP flow aware adaptive path switching in diffserv enabled MPLS networks
Author(s) -
Alparslan Onur,
Akar Nail,
Karasan Ezhan
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
european transactions on telecommunications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1541-8251
pISSN - 1124-318X
DOI - 10.1002/ett.1468
Subject(s) - goodput , computer network , computer science , tcp friendly rate control , equal cost multi path routing , tcp global synchronization , distributed computing , static routing , network congestion , routing protocol , routing (electronic design automation) , throughput , telecommunications , network packet , wireless
We propose an adaptive flow‐level multi‐path routing‐based traffic engineering solution for an IP backbone network carrying TCP/IP traffic. Incoming TCP flows are switched between two explicitly routed paths, namely the primary and secondary paths (PP and SP), for resilience and potential goodput improvement at the TCP layer. In the proposed architecture, PPs receive a preferential treatment over SPs using differentiated services mechanisms. The reason for this choice is not for service differentiation but for coping with the detrimental knock‐on effect stemming from the use of longer SP that is well known for conventional network load balancing algorithms. Moreover, both paths are congestion‐controlled using Explicit Congestion Notification marking at the core and Additive Increase Multiplicative Decrease rate adjustment at the ingress nodes. The delay difference between PP and SP is estimated using two per‐egress rate‐controlling buffers maintained at the ingress nodes for each path, and this delay difference is used to determine the path over which a new TCP flow will be routed. We perform extensive simulations using ns‐2 in order to demonstrate the viability of the proposed distributed adaptive multi‐path routing method in terms of per‐flow TCP goodput. The proposed solution consistently outperforms the single‐path routing policy and provides substantial per‐flow goodput gains under poor PP conditions. Moreover, highest goodput improvements under the proposed scheme are achieved by flows that receive the lowest goodputs with single‐path routing, while the performance of the flows with high goodputs with single‐path routing does not deteriorate with the proposed path switching technique. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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