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In this work, we consider four problems in the context of Internet traffic control. The first problem is to understand when and why a sender that implements an equation-based rate control would be TCP-friendly, or not—a sender is said to be TCP-friendly if ...
This document is replaced by "The Random Trip Model: Stability, Stationary Regime, and Perfect Simulation" by the same authors LCA-REPORT-2006-003 href="http://infoscience.epfl.ch/s ...
We consider the problem of providing delay bounds to reserved traffic in high-speed input-queued switches. We assume that the matrix of bandwidth demands is known and we use the now standard approach of decomposing this matrix into a convex combination of ...
This document is replaced by "The Random Trip Model: Stability, Stationary Regime, and Perfect Simulation" by the same authors LCA-REPORT-2006-003 href="http://infoscience.epfl.ch/s ...
We define ``random trip", a generic mobility model for independent mobiles that contains as special cases: the random waypoint on convex or non convex domains, random walk with reflection or wrapping, city section, space graph and other models. We use Palm ...
We consider the problem of providing delay bounds to reserved traffic in high-speed input-queued switches. We assume that the matrix of bandwidth demands is known and we use the now standard approach of decomposing this matrix into a convex combination of ...
We consider increase-decrease congestion controls, a formulation that accommodates many known congestion controls. There have been many works that aim to obtain relation between the loss-event rate \fpp and time-average window \taw for some known parti ...
We consider the problem of bounding the probability of buffer overflow in a network node receiving independent inputs that are each constrained by arrival curves, but that are served as an aggregate. Existing results (for example \cite{kesidis-00-b} and \c ...
We consider the problem of providing delay bounds to reserved traffic in high-speed input-queued switches. We assume that the matrix of bandwidth demands is known and we use the now standard approach of decomposing this matrix into a convex combination of ...
We consider unicast equation-based rate con-trol, where, at some points in time, a sender adjusts its rate to f(p,r), where p is an on-line estimate of the loss-event rate observed by this source, r of the average round-trip time, and f is a TCP throughput ...