Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
451543 Computer Networks 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

It has been observed that TCP connections that go through multiple congested links (MCL) have a smaller transmission rate than the other connections. Such TCP behavior is a result of two components (i) the cumulative packet losses that a flow experiences at each router along its path; (ii) the longer round trip times (RTTs) suffered by such flows due to non-negligible queueing delays at congested routers. This double “bias” against connections with MCLs has been shown to approximate the so-called minimum potential delay fairness principle in the current Internet. Despite the recent proliferation of new congestion control proposals for TCP in high-speed networks, it is still unclear what kind of fairness principle could be achieved with such newly proposed congestion control protocols in high-speed networks with large-delays. Studies already show that some high-speed TCP variants may cause surprisingly severe RTT unfairness in high-speed networks with DropTail routers.This paper studies the problem of unfairness in high-speed networks with some well-known high-speed TCP variants in presence of multiple congested links and highlights the severity of such unfairness when DropTail queue management is adopted.Through a simple synchronized loss model analysis, we show how synchronized losses with DropTail in high-speed networks could lead to severe RTT unfairness and drop probability (DP) unfairness; while random marking AQM schemes, which break the packet loss synchrony mitigate such unfairness dramatically by ensuring that the packet loss probability of a flow is the sum of the loss probabilities on the congested routers it crosses.Extensive simulations are carried out and the results support our findings.

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