scholarly journals Real-Time Communications in Autonomic Networks: System Implementation and Performance Evaluation

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Tselios ◽  
C. Papageorgiou ◽  
K. Birkos ◽  
I. Politis ◽  
T. Dagiuklas

This paper describes the design and prototype implementation of a communication platform aiming to provide voice and video communication in a distributed networking environment. Performance considerations and network characteristics have also been taken into account in order to provide the set of properties dictated by the sensitive nature and the real-time characteristics of the targeted application scenarios. The proposed system has been evaluated both by experimental means as well as subjective tests taken by an extensive number of users. The results show that the proposed platform operates seamlessly in two hops, while in the four hops scenario, audio and video are delivered with marginal distortion. The conducted survey indicates that the user experience in terms of Quality of Service has obtained higher scores in the scenario with the two hops.

2014 ◽  
Vol 926-930 ◽  
pp. 1984-1987
Author(s):  
Peng Wei Li ◽  
Hong Li Zhao ◽  
Hai Tao Yang ◽  
Shu Sun

The DDS middleware provides powerful support for data dissemination in the distributed real-time and embedded (DRE) systems, and supports multiple transport protocol (e.g. TCP, UDP and Multicast) that affect the end-to-end quality of service (QoS) properties (e.g. latency, jitter and reliability).In order to evaluate the performance of the transport protocol and then evaluate the affection on the DDS middleware QoS, this paper first briefly compares the common DDS implementations, and then presents performance evaluation and analysis of the transport protocol in OpenDDS with different environment configurations, at last presents the conclusion.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 51
Author(s):  
George Kokkonis ◽  
Kostas Psannis ◽  
Sotirios Kontogiannis ◽  
Petros Nicopolitidis ◽  
Manos Roumeliotis ◽  
...  

Real-time transferring of the haptic sense over the Internet is quite a challenging task. This paper outlines the proposed protocols for transferring haptic streams over the Internet. Moreover, it describes the Quality of Service requirements that a network has to fulfill in order to successfully use haptic interfaces with high update rates over the Internet. Extensive simulations and experiments for the performance evaluation of transport protocols for real-time transferring haptic data are carried out. Complements between simulation and real world experiments are discussed. The metrics that are measured for the performance evaluation are delay, jitter, throughput, efficiency, packet loss and one proposed by the authors, packet arrival deviation. The simulation tests reveal which protocols could be used for the transfer of real-time haptic data over the Internet.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document