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L. Brakmo, L. Peterson, "TCP Vegas: End-to-End Congestion Control in a Global Internet," IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 13(8):1465-1480, October 1995. 13

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
The Influence of the Large Bandwidth-Delay Product on TCP.. - Lee, Lee, Choi (2001)   (Correct)

....data that has been received and queued. TCP SACK can recover multiple segment losses in one round trip time hence achieving better link utilization than Tahoe, Reno, or NewReno. But SACK has a deployment problem because it requires changes in both the sender and receiver protocol suites. TCP Vegas [7] focuses on estimating the bottleneck bandwidth. Vegas always tries to keep the bottleneck buffer occupancy between two thresholds c and , while Tahoe, Reno, NewReno, or SACK increases the amount of outstanding packets until packet losses occur. We choose TCP Reno, NewReno, and SACK for ....

L. Brakmo, L. Peterson, "TCP Vegas: End-to-End Congestion Control in a Global Internet," IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 13(8):1465-1480, October 1995. 13


Performance Analysis of TCP over Static Ad Hoc Wireless.. - Ramarathinam, Labrador (2002)   (4 citations)  (Correct)

....window faster than TCP NewReno by having specific information about the packets in flight and the ones correctly received. Other TCP versions have been published but not widely implemented as they are in research stages yet or are more specific for certain environments [16] 1] 17] 13] [2]. These TCP versions are not considered in this paper. Not many performance studies of transport layer protocols over ad hoc networks exist. In [7] the authors rather focus on the interactions between TCP and different MAC layer protocols. They don t investigate the performance of different TCP ....

L. S. Brakmo and L. L. Peterson. TCP Vegas: End to End Congestion Control on a Global Internet. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 13, No. 8:1465-- 1480, 1995.


Performance of TCP over Wireless Networks with the Snoop Protocol - And (2002)   (Correct)

....and the most important solutions are not studied and compared all together. Therefore, we still don t have a good idea about what is the best combination. Here we present preliminary results in this direction including performance results of TCP Tahoe [8] Reno, New Reno, SACK [9] and Vegas [6] over wireless networks with and without the Snoop protocol. Future work will include the other relevant solutions at the link level. 2 Simulation Environment Related Work We use the very well known wired cum wireless topology in our experiments where one station is directly attached to a ....

L. S. Brakmo and L. L. Peterson. TCP Vegas: End to End Congestion Control on a Global Internet. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 13, No. 8, 1995.


Performance Analysis of Congestion Control and Avoidance.. - Raghavendra (1997)   (Correct)

....such as TCP. The second mechanism describes a strategy to detect the incipient stages of congestion from the end hosts. The general idea in these techniques is to watch for some sign from the network that congestion is building up and that congestion collapse is imminent. Specifically, TCP Vegas [BP95] does so by looking at changes in the throughput rate and comparing the measured throughput rate with an expected throughput rate. Though Vegas received considerable attention [ADLY95] there is wide acceptance [Bea97] of the theory that there is a limit to how much can be accomplished from the ....

....and an optimization called header prediction which optimizes for the common case that packets arrive in order. TCP Reno also supports delayed ACKS, that is, acknowledging every other packet rather than every segment although this is a selectable option that is sometimes turned off. ffl TCP Vegas,[BP95] developed at the University of Arizona, reported a throughput increase of between 37 71 over TCP Reno. This dramatic improvement in throughput was achieved by a more efficient use of bandwidth rather than an aggressive retransmission policy. Vegas also uses a host centric congestion avoidance ....

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L. Brakmo and L. Peterson. TCP Vegas: End-to-end congestion control in a global internet. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications (JSAC), 13(8):1465--1480, October 1995.

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