Extending RSVP for Quality of Security Service
IEEE Internet Computing
Performance evaluation of RSVP extensions for a guaranteed delivery scenario
Computer Communications
Dynamic management of quality of service with priority for multimedia multicasting
International Journal of Autonomous and Adaptive Communications Systems
Wireless Personal Communications: An International Journal
MILCOM'06 Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE conference on Military communications
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RSVP is a resource reservation setup protocol that can be used by a host to request specific QoS for multicast multimedia flows on the Internet. Multiprotocol label switching (MPLS) architecture also needs RSVP. The fact that the resolutions of the display system used in different receiver nodes might have different, multi-resolution characteristics is supported in the MPEG-4 standard, and the EZW compression algorithm can cease decoding at any point in the bitstream. However, RSVP does not provide a more flexible mechanism. In this article we propose an extension of RSVP to provide the needed mechanism, coined dynamic RSVP (DRSVP), to dynamically adjust reserved resources on nodes without much effort. It provides different video resolutions to different receiver nodes with different needed reserved resources. Therefore, it does not waste precious Internet resources to transmit unnecessary multimedia packets.