The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. ex. Some numerals are expressed as "XNUMX".
Copyrights notice
The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. Copyrights notice
La suite de protocoles TCP/IP constitue l'exigence standard pour toutes les applications devant communiquer sur Internet. Comme les applications TCP/IP sont incapables de spécifier les paramètres de QoS requis pour la plupart des services en mode de transfert asynchrone (ATM), elles ont tendance à utiliser la catégorie de service à débit binaire non spécifié (UBR) lorsqu'elles s'exécutent sur des réseaux ATM. Le service UBR utilise toute bande passante inutilisée par le reste des services ATM. Cela a conduit le groupe de gestion du trafic de l'ATM Forum à définir une nouvelle catégorie de services appelée débit de trame garanti (GFR). GFR est destiné à fournir des garanties de débit cellulaire minimum et un accès équitable à la bande passante excédentaire laissée par les services plus prioritaires. Cet article présente d'abord un aperçu didacticiel du GFR, puis présente une étude des travaux de recherche qui ont été menés pour la conception et la mise en œuvre de mécanismes de commutation ATM associés.
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Copier
I. ANDRIKOPOULOS, A. LIAKOPOULOS, G. PAVLOU, Z. SUN, "Providing Rate Guarantees for Internet Application Traffic Across ATM Networks" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications,
vol. E83-B, no. 2, pp. 123-124, February 2000, doi: .
Abstract: The TCP/IP protocol suite is the standard requirement for all applications that need to communicate over the Internet. As TCP/IP applications are unable to specify the QoS parameters needed for most Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) services, they tend to use the unspecified bit rate (UBR) service category when running across ATM networks. The UBR service utilizes any bandwidth that is left unused by the rest of the ATM services. This has led the ATM Forum's Traffic Management Group to define a new service category called guaranteed frame rate (GFR). GFR is intended to provide minimum cell rate guarantees and fair access to excess bandwidth left over from higher-priority services. This article first presents a tutorial overview of GFR and then presents a survey of the research work that has been carried out toward the design and implementation of associated ATM switch mechanisms.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/communications/10.1587/e83-b_2_123/_p
Copier
@ARTICLE{e83-b_2_123,
author={I. ANDRIKOPOULOS, A. LIAKOPOULOS, G. PAVLOU, Z. SUN, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications},
title={Providing Rate Guarantees for Internet Application Traffic Across ATM Networks},
year={2000},
volume={E83-B},
number={2},
pages={123-124},
abstract={The TCP/IP protocol suite is the standard requirement for all applications that need to communicate over the Internet. As TCP/IP applications are unable to specify the QoS parameters needed for most Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) services, they tend to use the unspecified bit rate (UBR) service category when running across ATM networks. The UBR service utilizes any bandwidth that is left unused by the rest of the ATM services. This has led the ATM Forum's Traffic Management Group to define a new service category called guaranteed frame rate (GFR). GFR is intended to provide minimum cell rate guarantees and fair access to excess bandwidth left over from higher-priority services. This article first presents a tutorial overview of GFR and then presents a survey of the research work that has been carried out toward the design and implementation of associated ATM switch mechanisms.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={February},}
Copier
TY - JOUR
TI - Providing Rate Guarantees for Internet Application Traffic Across ATM Networks
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SP - 123
EP - 124
AU - I. ANDRIKOPOULOS
AU - A. LIAKOPOULOS
AU - G. PAVLOU
AU - Z. SUN
PY - 2000
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SN -
VL - E83-B
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JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Y1 - February 2000
AB - The TCP/IP protocol suite is the standard requirement for all applications that need to communicate over the Internet. As TCP/IP applications are unable to specify the QoS parameters needed for most Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) services, they tend to use the unspecified bit rate (UBR) service category when running across ATM networks. The UBR service utilizes any bandwidth that is left unused by the rest of the ATM services. This has led the ATM Forum's Traffic Management Group to define a new service category called guaranteed frame rate (GFR). GFR is intended to provide minimum cell rate guarantees and fair access to excess bandwidth left over from higher-priority services. This article first presents a tutorial overview of GFR and then presents a survey of the research work that has been carried out toward the design and implementation of associated ATM switch mechanisms.
ER -