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Fifth IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications (ISCC 2000)
How Unfair can Weighted Fair Queuing be?
Antibes, France
July 04-July 06
ISBN: 0-7695-0722-0
Goncalo Quadros, Universidade de Coimbra
Antonio Alves, Universidade de Coimbra
Edmundo Monteiro, Universidade de Coimbra
Fernando Boavida, Universidade de Coimbra
This paper presents a study carried out on a Weighted Fair Queuing implementation for Unix routers - the WFQ implementation of the ALTQ project. It shows the WFQ/ALTQ weaknesses and explains why we cannot expect an interesting behavior from a system using such a scheduler.The conclusions here presented are supported by a set of tests using UDP traffic only. With a tool developed in our laboratory, we were able to show that changing the classes' weights does not necessarily result on a different Quality of Service for each of the existing classes. To achieve this differentiation, the lengths of the queues that serve the scheduler (one for each class) must be increased beyond reasonable values.We found that the low-level dynamics of FreeBSD systems practically turns WFQ schedulers useless. The same is applicable to any other work-conserving discipline. Thus, an important conclusion of this paper, is that one must design very carefully the platforms that support work conserving disciplines in order to expect adequate behaviors from those systems, in terms of QoS provision.
Citation:
Goncalo Quadros, Antonio Alves, Edmundo Monteiro, Fernando Boavida, "How Unfair can Weighted Fair Queuing be?," iscc, pp.779, Fifth IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications (ISCC 2000), 2000
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