Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
449294 Computer Communications 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Active Queue Management is a convenient way to administer the network load without increasing the complexity of end-user protocols. Current AQM techniques work in two ways; the router either drops some of its packets with a given probability or creates different queues with corresponding priorities. Head-to-Tail introduces a novel AQM approach: the packet rearrange scheme. Instead of dropping, HtT rearranges packets, moving them from the head of the queue to its tail. The additional queuing delay triggers a sending rate decrease and congestion events can be avoided. The HtT scheme avoids explicit packet drops and extensive retransmission delays. In this work, we detail the HtT algorithm and demonstrate when and how it outperforms current AQM implementations. We also approach analytically its impact on packet delay and conduct extensive simulations. Our experiments show that HtT achieves better results than Droptail and RED methods in terms of retransmitted packets and Goodput.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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