Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks

Scheduling disciplines are used in network routers/switches to provide a wide range of Quality of Service (QoS) assurances. With the development of the Internet technologies, two new branches of scheduling family arise in order to provide QoS in the context of emerging networking environments. In pa...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yin, Yong Ning
Other Authors: Poo Gee Swee
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/15167
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-15167
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-151672023-07-04T17:00:47Z Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks Yin, Yong Ning Poo Gee Swee School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Network Technology Research Centre DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer systems organization::Computer-communication networks Scheduling disciplines are used in network routers/switches to provide a wide range of Quality of Service (QoS) assurances. With the development of the Internet technologies, two new branches of scheduling family arise in order to provide QoS in the context of emerging networking environments. In particular, aggregate scheduling is developed to provide scalable QoS in aggregation-based high-speed networks, while dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA) is developed to offer efficient QoS support in Ethernet passive optical network (EPON)-based access networks. This thesis contributes to the design, analysis, and evaluation of various aggregate scheduling disciplines and DBA algorithms. The first part of this work studies aggregate scheduling using the concept of route interference. A general service scheme is proposed which features wide-range implementations. We consider a general network model and define a source rate condition in terms of the route interference. We show that there exist deterministic bounds on end-to-end delay and buffer size at all nodes provided that each flow obeys its source rate condition when entering the network. Experiments show good agreement between analytical and simulation results. To exploit the advantage of fair aggregation in aggregate scheduling, we then propose a guaranteed rate fair aggregator (GRFA) for flow aggregation and show analytically the advantage of aggregate scheduling with GRFA in delivering deterministic end-to-end delay bound. Subsequently, we devise a flow aggregation capable of guaranteed rate (FA-GR) scheduling and a priority-shaper for aggregate scheduling. This approach obtains the same level of end-to-end delay bound as GRFA-based approach while achieving lower complexity and implementation cost. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (EEE) 2009-04-08T03:49:05Z 2009-04-08T03:49:05Z 2009 2009 Thesis Yin, Y. N. (2009). Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/15167 10.32657/10356/15167 en 199 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer systems organization::Computer-communication networks
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Computer science and engineering::Computer systems organization::Computer-communication networks
Yin, Yong Ning
Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
description Scheduling disciplines are used in network routers/switches to provide a wide range of Quality of Service (QoS) assurances. With the development of the Internet technologies, two new branches of scheduling family arise in order to provide QoS in the context of emerging networking environments. In particular, aggregate scheduling is developed to provide scalable QoS in aggregation-based high-speed networks, while dynamic bandwidth allocation (DBA) is developed to offer efficient QoS support in Ethernet passive optical network (EPON)-based access networks. This thesis contributes to the design, analysis, and evaluation of various aggregate scheduling disciplines and DBA algorithms. The first part of this work studies aggregate scheduling using the concept of route interference. A general service scheme is proposed which features wide-range implementations. We consider a general network model and define a source rate condition in terms of the route interference. We show that there exist deterministic bounds on end-to-end delay and buffer size at all nodes provided that each flow obeys its source rate condition when entering the network. Experiments show good agreement between analytical and simulation results. To exploit the advantage of fair aggregation in aggregate scheduling, we then propose a guaranteed rate fair aggregator (GRFA) for flow aggregation and show analytically the advantage of aggregate scheduling with GRFA in delivering deterministic end-to-end delay bound. Subsequently, we devise a flow aggregation capable of guaranteed rate (FA-GR) scheduling and a priority-shaper for aggregate scheduling. This approach obtains the same level of end-to-end delay bound as GRFA-based approach while achieving lower complexity and implementation cost.
author2 Poo Gee Swee
author_facet Poo Gee Swee
Yin, Yong Ning
format Theses and Dissertations
author Yin, Yong Ning
author_sort Yin, Yong Ning
title Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
title_short Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
title_full Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
title_fullStr Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
title_full_unstemmed Quality of Service provisioning for IP/MPLS networks and EPON networks
title_sort quality of service provisioning for ip/mpls networks and epon networks
publishDate 2009
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/15167
_version_ 1772828886778773504