TY - GEN
T1 - ELB
T2 - IEEE GLOBECOM 2006 - 2006 Global Telecommunications Conference
AU - Taleb, Tarik
AU - Mashimo, Daisuke
AU - Jamalipour, Abbas
AU - Hashimoto, Kazuo
AU - Nemoto, Yoshiaki
AU - Kato, Nei
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Due to geographical and/or climatic constraints, the community of future satellite users will exhibit a significant variance in its density over the Globe. This density variance will yield a scenario where some satellite links are congested while others are underutilized. To ensure an intelligent engineering of traffic over satellite networks, this paper proposes a routing protocol that enables neighboring satellites to explicitly exchange information on their congestion status. A "soon-to-be-congested" satellite requests its neighboring satellites to decrease their data forwarding rates. In response, the neighboring satellites search for less congested paths that do not include the satellite in question and communicate a portion of data, primarily destined to the satellite, via the retrieved paths. By so doing, congestion, and the resulting packet drops, can be avoided. A better distribution of traffic among satellites can be guaranteed as well. The proposed scheme is dubbed "Explicit Load Balancing" (ELB) scheme. A set of simulations is conducted to evaluate the performance of the ELB scheme using the Network Simulator. In terms of Quality of Service, encouraging results are obtained: better traffic distribution, higher throughput, and lower packet drops.
AB - Due to geographical and/or climatic constraints, the community of future satellite users will exhibit a significant variance in its density over the Globe. This density variance will yield a scenario where some satellite links are congested while others are underutilized. To ensure an intelligent engineering of traffic over satellite networks, this paper proposes a routing protocol that enables neighboring satellites to explicitly exchange information on their congestion status. A "soon-to-be-congested" satellite requests its neighboring satellites to decrease their data forwarding rates. In response, the neighboring satellites search for less congested paths that do not include the satellite in question and communicate a portion of data, primarily destined to the satellite, via the retrieved paths. By so doing, congestion, and the resulting packet drops, can be avoided. A better distribution of traffic among satellites can be guaranteed as well. The proposed scheme is dubbed "Explicit Load Balancing" (ELB) scheme. A set of simulations is conducted to evaluate the performance of the ELB scheme using the Network Simulator. In terms of Quality of Service, encouraging results are obtained: better traffic distribution, higher throughput, and lower packet drops.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=50949130614&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=50949130614&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/GLOCOM.2006.523
DO - 10.1109/GLOCOM.2006.523
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:50949130614
SN - 142440357X
SN - 9781424403578
T3 - GLOBECOM - IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference
BT - IEEE GLOBECOM 2006 - 2006 Global Telecommunications Conference
Y2 - 27 November 2006 through 1 December 2006
ER -