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Revisiting TCP congestion control throughput models & fairness properties at scale

Adithya Abraham Philip, Ranysha Ware, Rukshani Athapathu, Justine Sherry, Vyas Sekar

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Abstract

Much of our understanding of congestion control algorithm (CCA) throughput and fairness is derived from models and measurements that (implicitly) assume congestion occurs in the last mile. That is, these studies evaluated CCAs in "small scale" edge settings at the scale of tens of flows and up to a few hundred Mbps bandwidths. However, recent measurements show that congestion can also occur at the core of the Internet on inter-provider links, where thousands of flows share high bandwidth links. Hence, a natural question is: Does our understanding of CCA throughput and fairness continue to hold at the scale found in the core of the Internet, with 1000s of flows and Gbps bandwidths?

Topics & Concepts

Fairness measureThroughputNetwork congestionComputer scienceComputer networkBandwidth (computing)The InternetMax-min fairnessEnhanced Data Rates for GSM EvolutionTelecommunicationsNetwork packetResource allocationOperating systemWirelessNetwork Traffic and Congestion ControlInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-votingPeer-to-Peer Network Technologies
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