Seventh IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications (ISCC'02) Fair-Rate GPS: A New Class for Decoupling Delay and Bandwidth Properties Ramada Hotel, Taormina-Giardini Naxos, Italy July 01-July 04 ISBN: 0-7695-1671-8
The Generalized Processor Sharing (GPS) is an idealized fluid scheduling discipline that has desirable properties for integrated services networks. It provides tight end-to-end guarantees to leaky-bucket constrained streams regardless of the behavior of other connections. It also allocates bandwidth fairly among all connections regardless of whether or not their traffic is constrained. According to their weight assignments, GPS networks are categorized into three classes: Rate Proportional Processor Sharing (RPPS), Consistent Relative Session Treatment (CRST) and arbitrary weighting. These classes achieve different degrees of complexity, stability, coupling between delay and bandwidth, and utilization gain. In this paper, we present a new GPS class: the fair-rate GPS. For this class, the weights are set in proportion to both bandwidth and required delay, thus achieving higher utilization while avoiding the coupling problem. We evaluate the new class using MPEG video traces and show that higher utilization gain can be achieved.
Citation:
Hala M. Mokhtar, Rubem Pereira, Madjid Merabti, "Fair-Rate GPS: A New Class for Decoupling Delay and Bandwidth Properties," iscc, pp.583, Seventh IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications (ISCC'02), 2002 Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||