Proceedings of the 35th conference on Winter simulation: driving innovation
Migration toward DiffServ-Enabled Broadband Access Networks
Information Networking. Towards Ubiquitous Networking and Services
A mechanism for QoS path selection in a WLAN-UMTS scenario: mobile agent approach
DNCOCO'08 Proceedings of the 7th conference on Data networks, communications, computers
QoS experiences in native IPv6 networks
International Journal of Network Management
End to End session based bearer control for IP multimedia subsystems
IM'09 Proceedings of the 11th IFIP/IEEE international conference on Symposium on Integrated Network Management
A centralized resource and admission control scheme for NGN core networks
ICOIN'09 Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on Information Networking
Art-QoS'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Architectures for quality of service in the internet
Improving the SLA-Based management of qos for secure multimedia services
MMNS'05 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Management of Multimedia Networks and Services
POBUCS framework: integrating mobility and qos management in next generation networks
IPOM'05 Proceedings of the 5th IEEE international conference on Operations and Management in IP-Based Networks
Signalling concepts in heterogeneous IP multi-domains networks
NEW2AN'06 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Next Generation Teletraffic and Wired/Wireless Advanced Networking
Web service based Inter-AS connection managements for qos-guaranteed diffserv provisioning
SERA'04 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Software Engineering Research, Management and Applications
Proactive resource provisioning
Computer Communications
The case for interdomain dynamic QoS-based service negotiation in the internet
Computer Communications
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
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Support for quality of service is an essential component of the next-generation Internet. The European research project AQUILA is committed to defining a DiffServ-based architecture for delivering on-demand QoS to requesting applications. Focal characteristics of the proposed solution are backward compatibility to the existing Internet and scalability to very large networks. To achieve such goals, AQUILA implements an overlaid distributed control layer, the resource control layer, implementing a novel mechanism for dynamic control of intradomain resources, the dynamic resource pool. On the interdomain aspects, the AQUILA architecture extends the BGRP framework for the aggregation of interdomain reservations to overcome scalability issues. This article describes the general AQUILA architecture, with a special focus on the DRP and BGRP mechanisms.