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April 10, 2006, Northwestern University

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1 April 10, 2006, Northwestern University
eXCP ExCP Offense by Amit April 10, 2006, Northwestern University

2 Congestion Control Design Space
End Point Router Support Try and Backoff TCP, Vegas, RAP, Fast TCP, S-TCP High Speed TCP DecBit, ECN, RED, AQM Request and Set PCP ATM, XCP, WFQ, RCP

3 Deployment Not end-to-end solution
Modification required in routers Anderson et. al. PCP:Efficient Endpoint Congestion control Incremental deployment is infeasible All routers must be XCP enabled What if bottleneck router is not XCP enabled? Loss due to congestion but XCP assumes otherwise

4 Performance Comparison with TCP-Reno instead of TCP-SACK, TCP-Vegas
Only Simulation based evaluation Limitation of sender buffer/receiver window How useful is for short web-traffic? Congestion avoidance vs slow-start

5 Security Sender Centric vs Receiver Centric Fake H_rtt
Fake H_cwnd (H_throughput) Discard H_feedback Compromised/Misbehaving Router Can completely shut-off good flows

6 Contribution Stoica's CSFQ: Core Stateless Fair Queuing (SIGCOMM '98)
Edge routers – per flow management, rate estimation (r) Core routers – fair allocation of bandwidth among flows (f) Each packet of a flow with arrival rate r is forwarded with probability p = min(1, f/r) Core routers estimate fair allocation of b/w using iterative algorithm XCP – modification of CSFQ, worse from the perspective that it cannot detect misbehaving hots nor can do policy enforcement


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