[Bloat] a flood of Bufferbloat-related papers
Lawrence Stewart
lstewart at room52.net
Wed Oct 12 03:49:53 EDT 2011
Hi David,
On 10/11/11 21:27, David Täht wrote:
> I sat down on my vacation last week thinking I would write up a review
> of progress since the bufferbloat effort began back in January, 2011. In
I think we should exercise a bit of caution in relation to saying things
like "the bufferbloat effort started in Jan 2011" - the pre-2011
literature alone (although not using the term "bufferbloat"
specifically) extensively covers the issues, symptoms and a myriad of
solutions for the problem.
> particular, I was interested in discovering to what extent we'd made the
> cross-over not just into other OSes besides Linux (e.g - BSD, windows)
> but into academia.
FWIW, I'm a FreeBSD kernel developer and a PhD student working on
transport layer congestion control. I've been involved in doing a lot of
experimental work related to bufferbloat (we refer to it as "collateral
damage" in our papers) using FreeBSD and Linux.
> In the future I would certainly appreciate the authors of bufferbloat
> related/referencing papers to mention them on this mailing list *as*
> they are published!
Here are a few pointers to relevant papers done by people at the
research centre where I'm studying:
"A rough comparison of NewReno, CUBIC, Vegas and ‘CAIA Delay Gradient’
TCP (v0.1)": http://caia.swin.edu.au/reports/110729A/CAIA-TR-110729A.pdf
"Revisiting TCP Congestion Control using Delay Gradients":
http://www.springerlink.com/content/mq50134631115076/
"Multimedia-unfriendly TCP Congestion Control and Home Gateway Queue
Management": http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1943552.1943558
"Improved coexistence and loss tolerance for delay based TCP congestion
control": http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=5735714&tag=1
"Collateral Damage: The Impact of Optimised TCP Variants on Real-Time
Traffic Latency in Consumer Broadband Environments":
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-01399-7_31
Off the top of my head, you should also check out the work done by Nick
McKeown's group (although their focus has been on core routers):
http://yuba.stanford.edu/buffersizing/
There's plenty of other relevant work that I can't think of specifically
right now, but it's out there.
Cheers,
Lawrence
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