Abstract: Wireless channels are characterized by more serious
bursty and location-dependent errors. Many packet scheduling
algorithms have been proposed for wireless networks to guarantee
fairness and delay bounds. However, most existing schemes do not
consider the difference of traffic natures among packet flows. This
will cause the delay-weight coupling problem. In particular, serious
queuing delays may be incurred for real-time flows. In this paper, it
is proposed a scheduling algorithm that takes traffic types of flows
into consideration when scheduling packets and also it is provided
scheduling flexibility by trading off video quality to meet the
playback deadline.
Abstract: The dynamics of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) traffic
over Ethernet between two computers are analyzed using nonlinear
dynamics which shows that there are two clear regimes in the data
flow: free flow and saturated. The two most important variables
affecting this are the packet size and packet flow rate. However,
this transition is due to a transcritical bifurcation rather than phase
transition in models such as in vehicle traffic or theorized large-scale
computer network congestion. It is hoped this model will help lay
the groundwork for further research on the dynamics of networks,
especially computer networks.