Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4962630 Simulation Modelling Practice and Theory 2017 19 Pages PDF
Abstract
Generating traffic has always been an important part of network simulations but has turned to an even more challenging task with modern networks. The statistical properties of the input stochastic processes traced in the networks used all along Information Era turned out to be complicated and difficult to reproduce. Taking into account successful efforts in modeling Internet traffic with FARIMA time series models, this paper attempts to extend their applicability and employ them to generate synthetic video traffic. It is known that FARIMA can model both the Short Range (SRD) and Long Range Dependence (LRD) existing in video traffic; however the traces it produces fail to describe correctly the moments (mean, standard deviation, skewness, kurtosis) of the distribution behind the data. Since an efficient traffic generator should capture both the statistical properties and queuing behavior of video traffic we experiment with models such as FARIMA with Student's t errors and FARIMA-GARCH with Normal and Student's t errors, improving somewhat the accuracy of the generated traffic. Furthermore, the paper suggests the projection of the traces generated by a FARIMA model to values of a Lognormal distribution. It is shown that such a methodology produces synthetic traces that can emulate very closely the behavior of real traces. In order to quantify closeness the generated traces are fed into a simple FIFO queuing system with finite buffers, where loss probability is calculated and compared to that experienced by the corresponding real traces. Using five different real traces, MPEG-4 or H.263, it is shown that the proposed methodology produces traffic generators that can capture satisfactorily several statistical properties of the real traffic and also its queuing behavior for a wide range of buffer sizes and service rates.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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