CMU-CS-98-136
Computer Science Department
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University



CMU-CS-98-136

Core-Stateless Fair Queueing: Achieving Approximately Fair Bandwidth Allocations in High Speed Networks

Ion Stoica, Scott Shenker, Hui Zhang

June 1998

A shorter version of this paper appeared in
Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM'98

CMU-CS-98-136.ps
CMU-CS-98-136.pdf


Keywords: Congestion control, fair queueing, scheduling


Router mechanisms designed to achieve fair bandwidth allocations, like Fair Queueing, have many desirable properties for congestion control in the Internet. However, such mechanisms usually need to maintain state, manage buffers, and/or perform packet scheduling on a per flow basis, and this complexity may prevent them from being cost-effectively implemented and widely deployed. In this paper, we propose an architecture that significantly reduces this implementation complexity yet still achieves approximately fair bandwidth allocations. We apply this approach to an island of routers -- that is, a contiguous region of the network -- and we distinguish between edge routers and core routers. Edge routers maintain per flow state; they estimate the incoming rate of each flow and insert a label into each packet header based on this estimate. Core routers maintain no per flow state; they use FIFO packet scheduling augmented by a probabilistic dropping algorithm that uses the packet labels and an estimate of the aggregate traffic at the router. We call the scheme Core-Stateless Fair Queueing. We present simulations and analysis on the performance of this approach, and discuss an alternate approach.

40 pages


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