Search results for "Resource Reservation Protocol"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Efficient Transport Protocol for Networked Haptics Applications

2008

The performance of haptic application is highly sensitive to communication delays and losses of data. It implies several constraints in developing networked haptic applications. This paper describes a new internet protocol called Efficient Transport Protocol (ETP), which aims at developing distributed interactive applications. TCP and UDP are transport protocols commonly used in any kind of networked communication, but they are not focused on real time application. This new protocol is focused on reducing roundtrip time (RTT) and interpacket gap (IPG). ETP is, therefore, optimized for interactive applications which are based on processes that are continuously exchanging data. ETP protocol i…

0209 industrial biotechnologySession Initiation ProtocolInternet Protocol Control Protocolcomputer.internet_protocolComputer scienceResource Reservation ProtocolLink Control ProtocolDistributed computingComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS020206 networking & telecommunications02 engineering and technologylaw.invention020901 industrial engineering & automationInternet protocol suitelawInternet Protocol0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringUser Datagram ProtocolReal Time Streaming Protocolcomputer
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A Migration Path for the Internet: From Best-Effort to a QoS Capable Infrastructure by Means of Localized Admission Control

2000

Looking back at many proposals appeared on the scene in these years, a fundamental lesson to be learned is that their success or failure is strictly tied to their backward compatibility with existing infrastructures. In this paper, we consider the problem of providing explicit admission control decisions for QoS aware services. We rely the decision to admit a new flow upon the successful and timely delivery, through the Internet, of probe packets independently generated by the end points. Our solution, called GRIP (Gauge&Gate Realistic Internet Protocol), is fully distributed and scalable, as admission control decisions are taken at the edge network nodes, and no coordination between router…

Routerbusiness.industryComputer scienceNetwork packetResource Reservation Protocolcomputer.internet_protocolQuality of serviceInternet layerDistributed computingComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSAdmission controlBackward compatibilitylaw.inventionlawInternet ProtocolThe InternetbusinesscomputerComputer network
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