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Bandwidth management

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Bandwidth management is the process of measuring and controlling the communications (traffic, packets) on a network link, to avoid filling the link to capacity or overfilling the link,[1] which would result innetwork congestion and poor performance of the network. Bandwidth is described bybit rate and measured in units of bits per second (bit/s) or bytes per second (B/s).[2]

Bandwidth management mechanisms and techniques

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Bandwidth management mechanisms may be used to further engineer performance and includes:

Link performance

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Issues which may limit the performance of a given link include:

  • TCP determines the capacity of a connection by flooding it until packets start being dropped (slow start)
  • Queueing in routers results in higherlatency andjitter as the network approaches (and occasionally exceeds) capacity
  • TCP global synchronization when the network reaches capacity results in waste of bandwidth
  • Burstiness of web traffic requires spare bandwidth to rapidly accommodate the bursty traffic
  • Lack of widespread support forexplicit congestion notification andquality of service management on the Internet
  • Internet Service Providers typically retain control over queue management and quality of service at their end of the link
  • Window Shaping allows higher end products to reduce traffic flows, which reduce queue depth and allow more users to share more bandwidth fairly

Tools and techniques

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abhttps://www.internetsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/BWroundtable_report-1.0.pdf Internet Society on Bandwidth Management
  2. ^"Bits Per Second".www.edrm.net. Retrieved2020-07-23.
  3. ^IETF RFC 2475 "An Architecture for Differentiated Services" section 2.3.3.3 - Internet standard definition of "Shaper"
  4. ^AppNeta."Rate Limiting Detection: Bandwidth and Latency".Appneta. Retrieved2020-07-23.
  5. ^"TCP Rate Control"(PDF).
  6. ^Handley, Mark; Padhye, Jitendra; Floyd, Sally; Widmer, Joerg (2008)."TCP Friendly Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol Specification".tools.ietf.org.doi:10.17487/RFC5348. Retrieved2020-07-23.
  7. ^Stiliadis, D.; Varma, A. (1998)."Latency-rate servers: A general model for analysis of traffic scheduling algorithms"(PDF).IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking.6 (5): 611.doi:10.1109/90.731196.S2CID 206475858. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved2020-07-23.
  8. ^"Traffic Shaping and Policing (Congestion Avoidance, Policing, Shaping, and Link Efficiency Mechanisms)".what-when-how.com. Retrieved2023-12-27.
  9. ^"Buffer Tuning"(PDF).
  10. ^Sonia Fahmy; Raj Jain (2000)."Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP)"(PDF). In Rafael Osso (ed.).Handbook of Emerging Communications Technologies: The Next Decade. CRC Press.S2CID 18245741 – viaWashington University in St. Louis.
  11. ^"Sniffers Basics and Detection"(PDF).
  • "Deploying IP and MPLS QoS for Multiservice Networks: Theory and Practice" by John Evans, Clarence Filsfils (Morgan Kaufmann, 2007,ISBN 0-12-370549-5)

External links

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