0000000001077305

AUTHOR

Francesco Saitta

SIP and MPLS Simulations on Network Simulator 2

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DYCOMA: A New Dynamic Codec Management Mechanism and Performance Evaluation in Telephony over IP Scenario

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Performance Evaluation of the DYnamic system for COdecs MAnagement: DYCOMA

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Introduction To Multimedia Sip User Agents

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QoS-aware SIP User Agent Operation in QoS-supporting networks

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An Integrated Multi-service Software Simulation Platform: SIMPSONS Architecture

This paper describes SIMPSONS (SIp and MPls Simulations On NS-2), which is a software platform for simulating multiple network scenarios, such as Telephony Over IP (TOIP), and multi-services networks extending the functionalities of Network Simulator NS-2. The innovative aspects of SIMPSONS is the complete integration of control protocols and traffic engineering mechanisms inside the same simulation tool. In fact, next generation networks must meet basically two fundamental requirements: support of Quality of Service (QoS) and Traffic Engineering (TE) functionalities. SIMPSONS is able to simulate DiffServ, MPLS, OSPF and SIP and their interaction in everything TOIP scenario. So with this po…

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Congestion Avoidance Using DYnamic COdec MAnagement: A solution for ISP

The large diffusion of VoIP is an essential key for the success of emerging Internet service providers. These ISPs conflict with the interests of historical and predominant network maintainers which often control the network infrastructure and telephone services. To win this competition, emerging ISPs have to adopt strategic QoS solutions which will capture the attention of network users and phone clients. This paper presents a solution which is able to obtain the same performance of a 64 Kbps channel reducing the costs for over-provisioning network bandwidth. DyCoMa is a mechanism studied for VoIP applications in network with a limited bandwidth for multimedia services. It works preventing…

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The Developing of a SIP User Agent

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Adaptive Low Priority Packet Marking for Better TCP Performance

This paper proposes a packet marking scheme for TCP traffic. Unlike previous literature work, in our scheme the majority of TCP packets are transmitted as high priority. The role of a low priority packet appears that of a probe, whose goal is to early discover network congestion conditions. Low priority packets are marked according to an adaptive marking algorithm. Numerical results show that our scheme provides improved throughput/delay performance.

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