Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels

This paper discusses the application of TCP tunnels on the Internet and how Internet traffic can benefit from the congestion control mechanism of the tunnels. Primarily, we show the TCP tunnels offer TCP-friendly flows protection from TCP-unfriendly traffic. TCP tunnels also reduce the many flows si...

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Main Authors: LEE, Boon Peng, BALAN, Rajesh Krishna, Lillykutty, Jacob, Seah, Winston, Ananda, A. L.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2002
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/70
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/1069/viewcontent/AvoidCongestionTCPTunnels_2002_CN.pdf
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Institution: Singapore Management University
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-10692016-03-16T15:26:43Z Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels LEE, Boon Peng BALAN, Rajesh Krishna Lillykutty, Jacob Seah, Winston Ananda, A. L. This paper discusses the application of TCP tunnels on the Internet and how Internet traffic can benefit from the congestion control mechanism of the tunnels. Primarily, we show the TCP tunnels offer TCP-friendly flows protection from TCP-unfriendly traffic. TCP tunnels also reduce the many flows situation on the Internet to that of a few flows. In addition, TCP tunnels eliminate unnecessary packet loss in the core routers of the congested backbones, which waste precious bandwidth leading to congestion collapse due to unresponsive UDP flows. We finally highlight that the use of TCP tunnels can, in principle, help prevent certain forms of congestion collapse described by Floyd and Fall [IEEE/ACM Trans Networking 7 (4) (1999) 458]. The deployment of TCP tunnels on the Internet and the issues involved are also discussed and we conclude that with the recent RFC2309 recommendation of using random early drop as the default packet-drop policy in Internet routers, coupled with the implementation of a pure tunnel environment on backbone networks makes the deployment of TCP tunnels a feasible endeavour worthy of further investigation. 2002-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/70 info:doi/10.1016/s1389-1286(01)00311-5 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/1069/viewcontent/AvoidCongestionTCPTunnels_2002_CN.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University TCP tunnels Aggregation Quality of service Congestion collapse Queue management Flow back-pressure Random early drop routers Software Engineering
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic TCP tunnels
Aggregation
Quality of service
Congestion collapse
Queue management
Flow back-pressure
Random early drop routers
Software Engineering
spellingShingle TCP tunnels
Aggregation
Quality of service
Congestion collapse
Queue management
Flow back-pressure
Random early drop routers
Software Engineering
LEE, Boon Peng
BALAN, Rajesh Krishna
Lillykutty, Jacob
Seah, Winston
Ananda, A. L.
Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
description This paper discusses the application of TCP tunnels on the Internet and how Internet traffic can benefit from the congestion control mechanism of the tunnels. Primarily, we show the TCP tunnels offer TCP-friendly flows protection from TCP-unfriendly traffic. TCP tunnels also reduce the many flows situation on the Internet to that of a few flows. In addition, TCP tunnels eliminate unnecessary packet loss in the core routers of the congested backbones, which waste precious bandwidth leading to congestion collapse due to unresponsive UDP flows. We finally highlight that the use of TCP tunnels can, in principle, help prevent certain forms of congestion collapse described by Floyd and Fall [IEEE/ACM Trans Networking 7 (4) (1999) 458]. The deployment of TCP tunnels on the Internet and the issues involved are also discussed and we conclude that with the recent RFC2309 recommendation of using random early drop as the default packet-drop policy in Internet routers, coupled with the implementation of a pure tunnel environment on backbone networks makes the deployment of TCP tunnels a feasible endeavour worthy of further investigation.
format text
author LEE, Boon Peng
BALAN, Rajesh Krishna
Lillykutty, Jacob
Seah, Winston
Ananda, A. L.
author_facet LEE, Boon Peng
BALAN, Rajesh Krishna
Lillykutty, Jacob
Seah, Winston
Ananda, A. L.
author_sort LEE, Boon Peng
title Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
title_short Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
title_full Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
title_fullStr Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
title_full_unstemmed Avoiding Congestion Collapse on the Internet Using TCP Tunnels
title_sort avoiding congestion collapse on the internet using tcp tunnels
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2002
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/70
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/1069/viewcontent/AvoidCongestionTCPTunnels_2002_CN.pdf
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