Publication | Closed Access
Quality-of-service routing in IP networks
46
Citations
13
References
2001
Year
Quality-of-service RoutingEngineeringQos RequirementsNetwork RoutingQuality-of-serviceNetwork AnalysisOperations ResearchQos ParametersScalable RoutingInternet Of ThingsSource RoutingRouting ProtocolComputer EngineeringRoutingComputer ScienceMobile ComputingNetwork Routing AlgorithmNetwork ScienceEdge ComputingCloud ComputingRobust Routing
Multimedia applications such as video-conferencing, telemedicine, HDTV, etc. have very stringent quality-of-service (QoS) demands and require a connection-oriented service. For these applications, a path satisfying their requirements in terms of bandwidth, delay buffer, etc. needs to be found. As conventional IP routing is based only on hop counts, it is not suitable for multimedia applications. It is clear that, to route requests that have QoS requirements, existing routers should be made QoS aware and the packet forwarding should be based on QoS parameters. Also, routing protocols like OSPF and RIP must be extended suitably to facilitate QoS routing. The goal of QoS routing algorithms is to find a loop-less path satisfying a given set of constraints on parameters like bandwidth, delay, etc. The path selection process could return either the entire path to the destination or the best next hop for the request. The first case is called "source routing" and the second is referred to as "distributed routing". In this paper, we propose a new distributed QoS routing algorithm for unicast flows, which has a very low call establishment overhead. Our algorithm makes use of existing IP routing protocols such as OSPF and RIP with minimal modifications.
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