Publication | Closed Access
The Tenet real-time protocol suite: design, implementation, and experiences
165
Citations
25
References
1996
Year
Real-time ChannelsEngineeringEdge ComputingNetwork Traffic ControlReal-time ApplicationsComputer EngineeringDelay-tolerant NetworkingReal-time ApplicationReal-time SystemsInternet Of ThingsMobile ComputingReal-time StreamsReal-time CommunicationCongestion ControlReal-time Protocol
Many future applications will require guarantees on network performance, such as bounds on throughput, delay, delay jitter, and reliability. To address this need, the authors have designed, simulated, and implemented a suite of network protocols to support real-time channels (network connections with mathematically provable performance guarantees). The protocols, which constitute the prototype Tenet real-time protocol suite (Suite 1), run on a packet-switching internetwork and can coexist with the popular Internet protocol suite. The authors rely on the use of connection-oriented communication, per-channel admission control, channel rate control, and priority scheduling. This protocol suite is the first set of transport and network-layer communication protocols that can transfer real-time streams with guaranteed quality in packet-switching internetworks. The authors have performed a number of experiments and demonstrations on multiple platforms using continuous-media loads (particularly video). The results show that the approach is both feasible and practical to build, and that it can successfully provide performance guarantees to real-time applications. The paper describes the design and implementation of, the suite, the experiments performed, and some of the lessons learned.
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