Dynamic congestion control for satellite networks employing TCP performance enhancement proxies

Author(s):  
L. Wu ◽  
F. Peng ◽  
V.C.M. Leung
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 92-98
Author(s):  
Liang Zong ◽  
Gaofeng Luo ◽  
Min Deng ◽  
Chenglin Zhao

Author(s):  
Adrien Thibaud ◽  
Julien Fasson ◽  
Fabrice Arnal ◽  
Renaud Sallantin ◽  
Emmanuel Dubois ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 1947-1970
Author(s):  
Satish Anamalamudi ◽  
Minglu Jin ◽  
Jae Moung Kim ◽  
Chang Liu

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 24
Author(s):  
Prawit Chumchu ◽  
Roksana Boreli ◽  
Aruna Seneviratne

In this paper, we design a new scalable reliable multicast transport protocol for satellite networks (RMT). This paper is the extensions of paper in [18]. The proposed protocoldoes not require inspection and/or interception of packets at intermediate nodes. The protocol would not require anymodification of satellites, which could be bent-pipe satellites or onboard processing satellites. The proposed protocol is divided in 2 parts: error control part and congestion control part. In error control part, we intend to solve feedback implosion and improve scalability by using a new hybrid of ARQ (Auto Repeat Request) and adaptive forward error correction (AFEC). The AFEC algorithm adapts proactive redundancy levels following the number of receivers and average packet loss rate. This leads to a number of transmissions and the number of feedback signals are virtually independent of the number of receivers. Therefore, wireless link utilization used by the proposed protocol is virtually independent of the number of multicast receivers. In congestion control part, the proposed protocol employs a new window-based congestion control scheme, which is optimized for satellite networks. To be fair to the other traffics, the congestion control mimics congestion control in the wellknown Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) which relies on “packet conservation” principle. To reduce feedback implosion, only a few receivers, ACKers, are selected to report the receiving status. In addition, in order to avoid “drop-to-zero” problem, we use a new simple wireless loss filter algorithm. This loss filter algorithm significantly reduces the probability of the congestion window size to be unnecessarily reduced because of common wireless losses. Furthermore, to improve achievable throughput, we employ slow start threshold adaptation based on estimated bandwidth. The congestion control also deals with variations in network conditions by dynamically electing ACKers.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Ciccarese ◽  
Mario De Blasi ◽  
Sebastiano Elia ◽  
Cosimo Palazzo ◽  
Luigi Patrono

In this paper a protocol, local to the satellite link, is defined in order to boost TCP performance in mobile integrated wired-satellite Internet. It has been conceived to help to overcome the well known retransmissions competition problem that arises when a satellite reliable link layer protocol is used to face satellite link errors. This protocol, called Local IPSec-aware Freezing proTocol (LIFT), has been designed to allow the satellite gateway, even in the presence of communications secured by IPSec, to freeze the TCP sender when it perceives a possible delay due to satellite channel conditions. The effectiveness of LIFT has been evaluated, using the ns-2 tool, in terms of Web page download mean time for a satellite mobile host. Simulation results have shown that the adoption of LIFT protocol provides substantial improvements in TCP performance.


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