Load-sensitive routing of long-lived IP flows
Proceedings of the conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communication
Granularity of QoS Routing in MPLS Networks
IWQoS '01 Proceedings of the 9th International Workshop on Quality of Service
A distributed cache architecture with snooping for QoS routing in large networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
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Quality of Service (QoS) routing algorithms have become the focus of recent research due to their potential for increasing the utilization of an Integrated Services Packet Network (ISPN) serving requests with QoS requirements. While heuristics for determining paths for such requests have been formulated for a variety of QoS models, little attention has been given to the overall processing complexity of the QoS routing protocol. Although on-demand path computation is very attractive due to its simplicity, many believe that its processing cost will be prohibitive in environments with high request rates. In this work, we study alternatives to on-demand path computation that can reduce this processing overhead. In addition to the well known solution of path pre-computation we introduce and study path caching, an incremental modification of on-demand path computation. Our simulation results show that caching is an effective alternative to path pre-computation and that both path caching and pre-computation can achieve significant processing cost savings without severely compromising routing performance.