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Table 3 Networking Environments Simulated

in Group Two-Phase Locking: A Scalable Data Sharing Protocol
by Sujata Banerjee , Panos K. Chrysanthis
"... In PAGE 5: ... The computation time per database operation is then between 500 and 1500 sec. In our simulations, we emulate various high speed networking scenarios, ranging from lo- cal area networks (LAN) to wide area networks (WAN), as listed in Table3 with their network latency values. 5.... ..."

Table 3 Networking Environments Simulated

in Group Two-Phase Locking: A Scalable Data Sharing Protocol
by Sujata Banerjee, Panoss K. Chrysanthis
"... In PAGE 5: ... The computation time per database operation is then between 500 and 1500 sec. In our simulations, we emulate various high speed networking scenarios, ranging from lo- cal area networks (LAN) to wide area networks (WAN), as listed in Table3 with their network latency values. 5.... ..."

Table 2: Assumed Hardware Con guration of the LAN Workstation LAN

in Distributed Algebraic Multigrid for Finite Element Computations
by Charles Farris, Manavendra Misra
"... In PAGE 10: ... However, one has to be concerned about the high cost of communication in a typical LAN environment. Table2 summarizes the hardware assumed for this research. The primary performance limitation of such an environment is the limited memory available on a single workstation which causes the workstation to perform large amounts of disk swapping for problems too large to t into the core memory.... ..."

Table 2: Values of (RIF; RDF ) for LAN Environment.

in Parameter tuning of rate-based congestion control algorithm for ABR service class in ATM Networks
by Hiroyuki Ohsaki , Masayuki Murata, Hideo Miyahara 1995
"... In PAGE 20: ... Thus, longer connections can increase their ACR faster than the others, and it results in unfairness among connections. We then change RDF to 1/16 for slower rate decrease (the third column of Table2 ). Simulation results for RIF = 1=32, 1/256 and 1/2048 are plotted in Figs.... ..."
Cited by 4

Table 2: Values of (RIF;; RDF) for LAN Environment.

in Parameter tuning of rate-based congestion control algorithms and its application to TCP over ABR
by Hiroyuki Ohsaki, Masayuki Murata, Hideo Miyahara 1995
"... In PAGE 20: ... Thus, longer connections can increase their ACR faster than the others, and it results in unfairness among connections. We then change RDF to 1/16 for slower rate decrease (the third column of Table2 ). Simulation results for RIF = 1=32, 1/256 and 1/2048 are plotted in Figs.... ..."
Cited by 4

Table 1: Values of RIF and RDF for LAN Environment.

in Performance Of Rate-Based Congestion Control Algorithm With Binary-Mode Switch In Atm Networks
by Hiroyuki Ohsaki , Masayuki Murata, Hideo Miyahara

Table 1: Values of RIF and RDF for LAN Environment.

in PERFORMANCE OF RATE-BASED CONGESTION CONTROL ALGORITHM WITH BINARY-MODE SWITCH IN ATM NETWORKS
by Hiroyuki Ohsaki, Masayuki Murata, Hideo Miyahara

Table 1 Results for the LAN environment Parameters Goodput Fairness

in Impact of cell discard strategies on TCP/IP in ATM UBR networks
by Vincent Rosolen, Olivier Bonaventure, Guy Leduc
"... In PAGE 7: ... 4.1 LAN environment Table1 gives an overview of the simulations results for the LAN environment. As mentioned in section 3.... ..."

Table 1. TCP-CM Data Transmissions in LAN environment

in TCP-CM: A Transport Protocol for TCP-friendly Transmission of Continuous Media
by Yongxiang Liu, Srijith Krishnan Nair, Lillykutty Jacob, A.L. Ananda
"... In PAGE 5: ... Each of these connections lasts for 30 minutes. The average bandwidth shares and loss rates are listed in Table1 . We notice that under such lightly loaded condition, each TCP-CM flow obtains a bandwidth close to 1Mbps, which matches to the rate of emulated video.... ..."

Table 1. High-level Filter Specification Lan- guage (HFSL)

in HiFi: A New Monitoring Architecture for Distributed Systems Management
by Ehab Al-shaer, Hussein Abdel-wahab, Kurt Maly 1999
"... In PAGE 2: ... In our model, the filter consists of three major components: the event expression which specifies the relation between the interesting event, filter expression which specifies the attributes value or the relation between the attributes of different events, and the action to be performed if both event and filters expressions are true. Table1 shows the formal definition of the High-level Filter Specification Language (HFSL) in BNF. The filter abstraction enables consumers to describe the expression relation between the attributes of different events as well as between the events which improves the expressive power and the usability of the monitoring language.... In PAGE 3: ... A composite event in this case could be for example a correlation expression between two events. The EX or FX (Event Expr and Filter Expr in Table1 ) evaluation of a filter could be distributed among several DMAs based on the location of related events in each predicate. The process of decomposing and allocat- ing EX and FX is described in in Section 4.... ..."
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