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Bandwidth Aggregation in Heterogeneous Networks . Kameswari Chebrolu, Ramesh Rao Department of ECE University of California, San Diego. Introduction. Recent mobile Internet growth spurred deployment of different wireless technologies e.g. GPRS, CDMA2000, HDR, 802.11, Bluetooth, Iridium etc
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Bandwidth Aggregation in Heterogeneous Networks Kameswari Chebrolu, Ramesh Rao Department of ECE University of California, San Diego
Introduction • Recent mobile Internet growth spurred deployment of different wireless technologies • e.g. GPRS, CDMA2000, HDR, 802.11, Bluetooth, Iridium etc • End-Users have flexibility regarding Interface choice • Can choose any number of interfaces to best fit application needs • Simultaneous use of multiple interfaces opens interesting possibilities • Bandwidth Aggregation, Mobility Support, Security, Reliability • Problem Statement: • How to effectively aggregate bandwidth across multiple network interfaces?
Motivation • Applications will drive next-generation network deployments • Video Applications • Video-on-demand • Interactive video • Video conferencing • Multiplayer games • Bandwidth requirements: 250 Kbps to 2-3 Mbps • Problem: • Wireless interfaces have bandwidth limitations • 50 Kbps – 384 Kbps (GPRS, CDMA2000) • TCP applications can also benefit from bandwidth aggregation
Challenges in Bandwidth Aggregation • Use of multiple interfaces Reordering • Video applications have stringent QoS requirements • Interactive applications • One way latency of 150ms , Max limit 400ms • Frame loss rate < 1% • Video on Demand (with VCR functions): • One way latency of 1-2 sec • Frame loss rate < 1% • Cannot tolerate excess delay due to reordering • TCP applications • More than 3 duplicate acks invokes congestion control • Bandwidth probing issues • Inter arrival between acks does not reflect available bandwidth
Related Work • Link-Layer Solutions • Bonding – aggregates circuit switched lines • IMA – ATM technology for aggregating multiple point-to-point links • Multilink PPP • Stripe Protocol • Generic load-sharing protocol based on Surplus Round Robin (SRR) • Minimizes packet processing overhead • SRR similar to WRR • Accounts for variable sized packets • Surplus (unused bandwidth) is carried on to next round
Related Work (Contd.) • Transport-Layer Solutions • RMTP • Reliable rate-based transport protocol • Flow and congestion control based on bandwidth estimation • Parallel TCP (pTCP) • Opens multiple TCP connections on each interface • Handles congestion and blackout through data reallocation and redundant striping • Network-Layer Solutions • Based on tunneling • Weighted round-robin based scheduling
Outline • Architecture • Scheduling algorithm • Evaluation • Analysis • Trace-based simulation • Ongoing work
Outline • Architecture • Scheduling algorithm • Evaluation • Analysis • Trace-based simulation • Ongoing work
Architecture for Bandwidth Aggregation • Link-Layer Solutions infeasible • End point is an IP address • Application/Transport Layer Solutions • Need to modify/rewrite code • Ensure compatibility with existing infrastructure • Network Layer solution • IP – a single standard • Application transparency and interoperability • Cleanest Solution
Architecture Details • Mobile IP based • Packets pass through Home Agent (HA) • Simultaneous Binding - multiple Care-of-Address registration • Intelligent scheduling of packets to multiple addresses • Radio Access Network Selection Unit (RSU) • Located on Mobile Host (MH) • Selects right interfaces based on app. reqmts. and cost • Update bindings with HA • Traffic Management Unit (TMU) • Located on HA and MH • Processes and schedules the incoming traffic onto multiple paths • Conveys application type and end goal requirements to HA • Scheduling Algorithm in TMU is crucial • Focus on Interactive Real-Time Applications
Scheduling Algorithm – Design Considerations • Bandwidth • Interested in WWAN system (CDMA2000, GPRS etc) • Provide only a few hundred kbps • Not interested in WLAN/WPAN systems • Wireless hop is the bottleneck link • Delay/Jitter • Wireline Delay – between HA and Base-Station (BS) • Delay values and variation small • If large, variation may likely be masked at BS as wireless hop is bottleneck • Wireless Delay – between Base-Station and MH • Queuing delay and transmission delay
Scheduling Algorithm – Design Considerations • Qos Support • Interested in systems that provide QoS (CDMA2000, UMTS etc not HDR) • Negotiated bandwidth and loss rate guaranteed for duration of session
Design Possibility – Weighted Round Robin • Schedules packets based on bandwidths of interfaces • Not suitable for real-time applications • Example: • Three interfaces with bandwidth ratios 5:2:1 • Packets 1-5 sent on IF1, 6-7 sent on IF2, 8 on IF3 • Packet 6 arrives ahead of packets 3,4,5 • Packet 3 suffers excess delay due to reordering • Ideal ordering: IF1 – 1,2,4,5,6; IF2 – 3,7; IF3 – 8 • Variants of WRR – Surplus Round Robin (SRR), Shortest Queue First face similar problems
Our approach:Earliest Delivery First • For each path (between HA and MH), estimate arrival time of a packet at MH • Estimation based on • Bandwidth of the interface • One-way wireline delay (estimated) on the Internet path • Schedule the packet on the path that delivers the packet the earliest • Quick remarks • No need for synchronized clocks (relative one-way delay counts) • EDF is not work conserving • EDF cannot totally eliminate reordering • Multiple applications can be handled by combining EDF with Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ)
EDF Details • Each path l is associated with three quantities • A variable , which is the time the channel becomes available next. • , the one-way wireline delay (estimate) of the path • , the bandwidth negotiated • - the arrival time, - the size of packet i, • Packet i scheduled on path l would be delivered at the MH at • EDF schedules the packet on the path p for which • is updated to
Performance of EDF • How well can EDF perform? • Can the application QoS requirements be met? • Is performance as good as having a Single-Link (SL) with the same aggregated bandwidth? • Approach • Analysis • Prove fairness of EDF in distributing bits across different links • Compare EDF with SL in terms of work, delay, jitter and buffering • Simulation • Consider application performance level metrics • Measure sensitivity of the algorithm to bandwidth asymmetry, number of interfaces, delay variation, channel losses
Properties of EDF • Notation: • - max packet Size, – number of interfaces, - bandwidth of link l, - weight of link l (normalized bandwidth) • Assumptions: • , and • When packets are of constant size, they arrive in order at the client • For variable sized packets – Given P packets to transmit, the maximum difference in normalized bits allocated to any two pair of links is • For WRR, this amount is a function of P and can be unbounded • For SRR it is
Properties of EDF (Contd.) • For any time t, the difference between the total number of bits W serviced by SL and EDF is • The difference in delay experienced by a packet i in SL and EDF is bounded by • The jitter experienced by a packet i without buffering is upper bounded by • The jitter experienced by a packet I with buffering is upper bounded by • The buffer size needed to deliver the packets in order is
Experimental Methodology • Trace driven simulation • Server • Video frame traces – office cam (Mpeg4 and H.263) • For MPEG-4, avg – 400kbps, peak - 2Mbps, frame period - 40ms • For H.263, avg – 260kbps, peak – 1.5Mbps, frame period - variable • Maximum packet size assumed is 1400 byte • Home Agent • Employs scheduling algorithm • Base-Station • No cross traffic • Serve packets first-come-first-serve basis
Experimental Methodology (Contd.) • Client • Begin video display after a fixed delay – startup latency L • Afterwards, display frames consecutively every t seconds (frame period) • Arrival after playback deadline results in frame loss • Startup latency bounds one-way delay of packets • Internet Path • Packet delay traces collected over different Internet paths • Hosts on UCSD, UCB, Duke, CMU • Wireline delay range used 15ms – 22 ms (one-way) • Algorithms under comparison • Single Link – SL • Surplus Round Robin - SRR
Application Performance Metrics • Backlog in the system • Delay experienced by packets • Frame Loss probability - Fraction of packets that miss playback deadline • Glitch Duration: Number of consecutive frames that cannot be displayed • Glitch Rate: Number of glitches/sec
Bandwidth Allocation % Bandwidth Needed over SL to achieve 0% frame loss, MPEG-4, BS = 3
Backlog • Bandwidth fixed at 600kbps SL EDF SRR Backlog in the system between HA and Client application, MPEG-4
Delay Distribution Cumulative Percentage of Delay, Mpeg-4, BS=3
Other Results • Delay Variation : EDF • Truncated Gaussian with mean 22ms, std. devn. 0-10ms • For a split 5:3:1 at 225ms, • No variation introduces 0.26% frame loss • 5ms variation, 0.27% frame loss • 10ms variation, 0.28% frame loss • Channel Losses • Limited retransmissions help • Other Applications • Non-Interactive Applications • Large tolerance for delay no big difference in relative perf. • Video-On-Demand Applications • High peak-to-mean rates imply over-provisioning of bandwidth • Choice of scheduling algorithm does not matter
Summary • Network-layer architecture to enable multiple communication paths • EDF scheduling algorithm: reduces delay experienced by packets in presence of multi-path. • An analysis of the algorithm shows that it doesn’t differ much from idealized SL • Trace-driven simulations • EDF mimics SL closely • Outperforms by a large margin WRR based approaches
Ongoing Work • Bandwidth Aggregation in Best-Effort Systems • Bandwidth Estimation at MH • Work ahead scheduling • TCP • Support TCP applications • Network layer solutions • Ad-hoc Networks • Security