Journal of Network and Systems Management
Policies in Accountable Contracts
POLICY '02 Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks (POLICY'02)
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Quality of service models for ad hoc wireless networks
The handbook of ad hoc wireless networks
Enhancing router QoS through job scheduling with weighted shortest processing time-adjusted
Computers and Operations Research
A multi-threshold online smoothing technique for variable rate multimedia streams
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Quality of service games in an IEEE 802.11 ad hoc wireless LAN
Proceedings of the 9th ACM international symposium on Modeling analysis and simulation of wireless and mobile systems
LANC '05 Proceedings of the 3rd international IFIP/ACM Latin American conference on Networking
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
An auction mechanism for allocating the bandwidth of networks to their users
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Place reservation: Delay analysis of a novel scheduling mechanism
Computers and Operations Research
Protecting information infrastructure from DDoS attacks by MADF
International Journal of High Performance Computing and Networking
Controlling the delay trade-off between packet flows using multiple reserved places
Performance Evaluation
Improving fairness among TCP flows by stateless buffer control with early drop maximum
Information Sciences: an International Journal
Fair and efficient dynamic bandwidth allocation for multi-application networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
A Q-learning model-independent flow controller for high-speed networks
ACC'09 Proceedings of the 2009 conference on American Control Conference
Nash Q-learning multi-agent flow control for high-speed networks
ACC'09 Proceedings of the 2009 conference on American Control Conference
An adaptive physiological homeostasis congestion control
AsiaCSN '07 Proceedings of the Fourth IASTED Asian Conference on Communication Systems and Networks
Configuring IP QoS mechanisms for graceful degradation of real-time services
MILCOM'06 Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE conference on Military communications
Transform-domain analysis of packet delay in network nodes with QoS-aware scheduling
Network performance engineering
Intelligent DDoS packet filtering in high-speed networks
ISPA'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Parallel and Distributed Processing and Applications
Multi-agent congestion control for high-speed networks using reinforcement co-learning
ISNN'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Advances in Neural Networks - Volume Part III
Design of a bandwidth-on-demand (BoD) protocol for satellite networks modelled as time-delay systems
Automatica (Journal of IFAC)
Low latency energy efficient communications in global-scale cloud computing systems
Proceedings of the 2013 workshop on Energy efficient high performance parallel and distributed computing
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In the last few years there has been considerable research toward extending the Internet architecture to provide quality of service guarantees for the emerging real-time multimedia applications. QoS provision is a rather controversial endeavour. At one end of the spectrum there were proposals for reservations and per-flow state in the routers. These models did not flourish due to the network's heterogeneity the complexity of the mechanisms involved, and scalability problems. At the other end, proposals advocating that an overprovisioned best effort network will solve all the problems are not quite convincing either. The authors believe that more control is clearly needed for protecting best effort service. An important requirement is to prevent congestion collapse, keep congestion levels low, and guarantee fairness. Appropriate control structures in a best effort service network could even be used for introducing differentiation. This could be achieved without sacrificing the best effort nature of the Internet or stressing its architecture beyond its limits and original design principles. We revisit the best effort service model and the problem of congestion while focusing on the importance of cooperative resource sharing to the Internet's success, and review the congestion control principles and mechanisms which facilitate Internet resource sharing