Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
492144 Simulation Modelling Practice and Theory 2007 26 Pages PDF
Abstract

The growth of Grid computing and the Internet has been exponential in recent years. These high-speed communication networks have had a tremendous impact on our civilisation. High-speed communication networks offer a wide range of applications, such as multimedia and data intensive applications, which differ significantly in their traffic characteristics and performance requirements. Many analytical studies have shown that self-similar network traffic can have a detrimental impact on network performance, including amplified queueing delays and packet loss rates in broadband wide area networks. Thus, full understanding of the self-similar nature in teletraffic engineering is an important issue.This paper presents a detailed survey of self-similar generators proposed for generating sequential and fixed-length self-similar pseudo-random sequences for simulation in communication networks. We evaluate and compare the operational properties of the fixed-length and sequential generators of self-similar pseudo-random sequences. The statistical accuracy and time required to produce long sequences are discussed theoretically and studied experimentally. The evaluation of the generators concentrated on two aspects: (i) how accurately self-similar processes can be generated (assuming a given mean, variance and self-similarity parameter H), and (ii) how quickly the generators can generate long self-similar sequences. Overall, our results have revealed that the fastest and most accurate generators of the six sequential and five fixed-length sequence generators considered are the SRP-FGN, FFT and FGN-DW methods.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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