Indian Institute of Technology Patna
Presentation
On
Admission Control in Internet
Guided by
Dr.SudhanMajhi
Submitted by
Vishal K. Waghmare
1811EE13
Motivation
•Internet currently provides only single class of “best-effort” service.
•No admission control and no assurances about delivery
•Existing applications are elastic.
•Tolerate delays and losses
•Can adapt to congestion
•Future “real-time” applications may be inelastic.
Quality of service (QoS)
▪Quality of service (QoS) refers to any technology that manages data
traffic to reduce packet loss, latencyand jitteron the network.
▪QoS controls and manages network resources
▪Enterprise networks need to provide predictable and measureable
services as applications --such as voice, video and delay-sensitive
data.
▪Organizations use QoS to meet the traffic requirements of sensitive
applications, such as real-time voice and video.
▪Organizations can achieve QoS by using certain tools and techniques,
such as jitter bufferand traffic shaping.
▪For many organizations, QoS is included in the service-level
agreement (SLA).
Organizations can measure QoS quantitatively by using several parameters,
including the following:
▪Packet losshappens when network links become congested and routers and
switches start dropping packets.
▪When packets are dropped during real-time communication, such as a voice
or video calls, these sessionscan experience jitter and gaps in speech.
▪Jitteris the result of network congestion, timing drift and route changes.
▪Too much jitter can degrade the quality of voice and video communication.
Quality of service (QoS) Parameters
▪Latencyis the time it takes a packet to travel from its source to its
destination.
▪Latency should be as close to zero as possible.
▪If a voice over IPcall has a high amount of latency, it can experience
echo and overlapping audio.
▪Bandwidthis the capacity of a network communications link to
transmit the maximum amount of data from one point to another in a
given amount of time.
▪QoS optimizes the network by managing bandwidth and setting
priorities.
▪Mean opinion score(MOS) is a measure used in the domain of
Quality of Experience
▪Mean opinion score(MOS) is a metric to rate voice quality that uses
a five-point scale, with a five indicating the highest quality.
▪MOS is a commonly used measure for video, audio, and audiovisual
quality evaluation.
▪For some applications, dedicated resources (such as a wavelength
across an optical network) may be needed in which case admission
control has to verify availability of such resources before a request can
be admitted.
▪For more elastic applications, a total volume of resources may be
needed prior to some deadline in order to satisfy a new request, in
which case admission control needs to verify availability of resources
at the time and perform scheduling to guarantee satisfaction of an
admitted request
Applications
Admission Control Systems
▪Asynchronous Transfer Mode(ATM)
▪Audio Video Bridging
▪IEEE 1394
▪Integrated services
▪Public switched telephone network
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
▪ATM was developed to meet the needs of the Broadband Integrated
Services Digital Network, designed to integrate telecommunication
networks.
▪Additionally, It was designed for networks that must handle both
traditional high-throughput data traffic (e.g., file transfers), and real-
time, low-latencycontent such as voice and video.
▪The reference model for ATM approximately maps to the three lowest
layers of the ISO-OSI reference model: network layer, data link layer,
and physical layer.
▪ATM is a core protocol used over the SONET/SDHbackbone of the
public switched telephone network(PSTN)
Audio Video Bridging (AVB)
▪Audio Video Bridging (AVB) is a common name for the set of
technical standardsdeveloped by the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers(IEEE) Audio Video Bridging Task Group of the
IEEE 802.1standards committee.
▪The charter of this organization is to "provide the specifications that
will allow time-synchronized low latency streaming services through
IEEE 802networks
IEEE 1394
▪IEEE1394is an interface standardfor a serial busfor high-speed
communications and isochronousreal-time data transfer.
▪It was developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Apple, which
called it FireWire.
Integrated services
▪In computer networking, IntServor integrated servicesis an
architecture that specifies the elements to guarantee quality of service
(QoS) on networks.
▪IntServcan for example be used to allow video and soundto reach the
receiver without interruption.
▪IntServspecifies a fine-grainedQoS system.
Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
▪The public switched telephone network(PSTN) is the aggregate of
the world's circuit-switched telephonenetworks that are operated by
national, regional, or local telephonyoperators, providing
infrastructureand services for public telecommunication.
▪The PSTN consists of telephone lines, fiber optic cables, microwave
transmissionlinks, cellular networks, communications satellites, and
undersea telephone cables, all interconnected by switching centers,
thus allowing most telephones to communicate with each other.
▪The technical operation of the PSTN adheres to the standards created
by the ITU-T.
▪These standards allow different networks in different countries to
interconnectseamlessly.
▪The E.163and E.164standards provide a single global address space
for telephone numbers.
▪The combination of the interconnected networks and the single
numbering planallow telephones around the world to dial each other.