A stop-and-go queueing framework for congestion management
SIGCOMM '90 Proceedings of the ACM symposium on Communications architectures & protocols
A bibliography on performance issues ATM networks
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
On the self-similar nature of Ethernet traffic
SIGCOMM '93 Conference proceedings on Communications architectures, protocols and applications
A further look at statistical multiplexing in ATM networks
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems
Open issues and challenges in providing quality of service guarantees in high-speed networks
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Dynamics of TCP traffic over ATM networks
SIGCOMM '94 Proceedings of the conference on Communications architectures, protocols and applications
Analysis, modeling and generation of self-similar VBR video traffic
SIGCOMM '94 Proceedings of the conference on Communications architectures, protocols and applications
International standardization of B-ISDN
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems - Special issue: Broadband ISDN: standards, switches, and traffic management
ATM network: goals and challenges
Communications of the ACM
Multimedia traffic management principles for guaranteed ATM network performance
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Equivalent capacity and its application to bandwidth allocation in high-speed networks
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
What should be the goal for ATM
IEEE Network: The Magazine of Global Internetworking
Access control of parallel multiserver loss queues
Performance Evaluation
Traffic policing in ATM networks with multimedia traffic: the super leaky bucket
Computer Communications
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The research on traffic control has not yet lead to a consensus on how to properly allocate resources in ATM networks. There are consequently no practicable methods available now, when the initial deployment of ATM switches and terminals is under way. Yet, many of the applications which motivate the deployment use multimedia and will thus require some degree of performance guarantees on the information transfer. Here we suggest a readily applicable method for reserving capacity in ATM networks. Cells using the reserved capacity may only depart at fixed time-instances, and have reserved buffers in the network nodes. The scheme gives a lossless performance with low delay-jitter, and it can be implemented with low complexity. The capacity reservation simplifies the call-acceptance and allows 'best-effort' traffic to use slack in the reserved and all of the non-reserved capacity.