Resequencing delay and buffer occupancy under the selective-repeat ARQ

  • Authors:
  • Z. Rosberg;N. Shacham

  • Affiliations:
  • IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY;-

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
  • Year:
  • 2006

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Abstract

Consider a communication network that regulates retransmissions of erroneous packets by a selective-repeat (SR) automatic repeat request (ARQ) protocol. Packets are assigned consecutive integers, and the transmitter continuously transmits them in order until a negative acknowledgement or a time-out is observed. The receiver, upon receipt of a packet, checks for errors and returns positive/negative acknowledgement (ACK/NACK) accordingly. Only packets for which either NACK or time-out have been observed are retransmitted. Under SR ARQ, the receiver accepts packets that are out of order and must store them temporarily if it has to deliver them in sequence. The resequencing buffer requirements and the resulting packet delay constitute major factors in overall system considerations. The authors derive the distributions of the buffer occupancy and the resequencing delay at the receiver under a heavy traffic situation. This enables the network designer to determine how much buffer capacity at the receiver guarantees certain specified performance measures