| K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181. |
....reconstruct (e.g. using FEC) sufficient knowledge about the corrupted packet that is required to notify the sender. Figure 2 Backward ETEN VI. FORWARD ETEN The forward ETEN (FETEN) mechanism illustrated in Figure 3 is analogous to forward explicit congestion notification schemes (e.g. 6] [7]) This mechanism also assumes that the intermediate router can extract (or reconstruct using FEC) complete and correct knowledge of the IP addresses, TCP ports, and TCP sequence number corresponding to the corrupted packet. Upon detection of a corrupted packet, the intermediate router transmits ....
....to the end hosts can be in one of several different forms: An absolute bit error rate, byte error rate, or packet error rate observed within a moving window in time. The error rate may be quantized into a small number of steps (for example, high, medium, and low) A binary feedback scheme [7] (see also [5] 6] is a special case that provides indication that the bit byte packet error rate exceeds some threshold. A relative error rate that simply indicates that the quantized error rate has increased or decreased from the previous value. An estimate of the probability that a ....
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158-181.
....However such messages consume critical network bandwidth, and hence are ineffective and unfair. Moreover, BSD TCP implementations use slow start combined with a small slow start threshold. This makes the use of Source Quench messages very unattractive to large window TCP connections. According to [5], in the DECbit congestion avoidance scheme, the gateway uses a congestion notification bit in the TCP packet headers to provide feedback about congestion in the network. The TCP source uses window flow control, and updates its window once every second roundtrip time. In its implementation [4] ....
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 158-181, May 1990.
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K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
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K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
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K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
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K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
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K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
No context found.
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
No context found.
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
No context found.
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
No context found.
K.K. Ramakrishnan, and R. Jain, "A Binary Feedback Scheme for Congestion Avoidance," ACM Transactions on Computer Systems, Volume 8, Number 2, May 1990, pp. 158--181.
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