| R. C. Durst, G. J. Miller, and E. J. Travis, "Tcp extentions for space communications," in Mobicom, 1996. |
....case, the sender will also retransmit the lost packet, leading to the so called interference phenomenon. Such interference can result in poor throughput, as shown in [3] 3 Related Work There has been interesting research on improving TCP performance in the presence of transmission errors [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7]. Indirect TCP protocols [1, 7] break one TCP connection into two one for the last wireless hop, and one for the rest of the path. This approach violates the end to end semantics of TCP. The Snoop protocol [3, 4] performs even better than indirect TCP, and does not violate the end to end ....
....retransmission of packets lost due to wireless transmission errors. The Explicit Bad State Notification (EBSN) scheme in [2] requires the base station to send a special message to the sender when bursty error conditions are detected on the wireless channel. Similar approaches are suggested in [5]. The existing schemes require cooperation from intermediate hosts (typically, the base station) on the path from the sender to the receiver. Also, in three circumstances listed below, the past research is not applicable. Note that these circumstances may occur independently or together. ffl IP ....
R. C. Durst, G. J. Miller, and E. J. Travis, "Tcp extentions for space communications," in Mobicom, 1996.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC