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We repeat
experiments 1 and 2, but with routers performing RED
queueing.
The RED parameters are set as recommended in
[23] with the ``gentle'' mode on. The minimum and maximum
RED thresholds are set to one-third and two-third of the buffer size.
Packets are probabilistically marked with ECN support from the senders.
Figure 6 plots the foreground document
transfer latency against the spare capacity with 16
background flows. Though Nice still performs as much as an order of
magnitude better than other protocols, it causes up to
a factor of 2 increase in document transfer latencies for large spare
capacities.
As figure 7 indicates, under RED, Nice closely
approximates router prioritization regardless of the number of flows
when the spare capacity is one, i.e. the demand workload consumes half of
the network capacity.
The relatively poor performance of Nice under RED when spare
capacities are large appears to reflect the sensitivity of Nice's
interference to bottleneck queue length (Equation 1). Whereas
Nice flows damage foreground flows when drop-tail queues are
completely full, under RED, interference can begin when the bottleneck
queue occupancy reaches RED's minimum threshold . One
solution may be to reduce Nice's parameter. The Nice-0.03 lines in Figures 6 and 7 plot Nice's interference under RED
when
instead of the default value of . Future
work is needed to better understand Nice's interaction with RED
queuing.
Next: Other results
Up: Results
Previous: Experiment 3: Sensitivity to
Arun Venkataramani
2002-10-08