An Analysis on the Effect of Extended Frames to the End-to-end Performance


The KIPS Transactions:PartC, Vol. 11, No. 6, pp. 787-798, Dec. 2004
10.3745/KIPSTC.2004.11.6.787,   PDF Download:

Abstract

High performance netwoking is one of key factors to provide support for data intensive applications in the Internet. Extended frame size has a major impact on end-to-end performance with increasing effective TCP throughput and decreasing system overhead. Most of the research about extended frames has focused on local area network performance and the impact that extended frames size has on the system elements including memory, network interface card and so forth. In the paper, we analyse the effects of the extended frames to the other traffic flows sharing Internet paths for the wide area performance of TCP by conducting various network simulations. Results show that securing available bandwidth in no loss and low delay networks is indispensable to exploit the efficiency of extended frames.


Statistics
Show / Hide Statistics

Statistics (Cumulative Counts from September 1st, 2017)
Multiple requests among the same browser session are counted as one view.
If you mouse over a chart, the values of data points will be shown.


Cite this article
[IEEE Style]
J. Y. Jo, J. S. Kwak, O. H. Byeon, "An Analysis on the Effect of Extended Frames to the End-to-end Performance," The KIPS Transactions:PartC, vol. 11, no. 6, pp. 787-798, 2004. DOI: 10.3745/KIPSTC.2004.11.6.787.

[ACM Style]
Jin Yong Jo, Jai Seung Kwak, and Ok Hwan Byeon. 2004. An Analysis on the Effect of Extended Frames to the End-to-end Performance. The KIPS Transactions:PartC, 11, 6, (2004), 787-798. DOI: 10.3745/KIPSTC.2004.11.6.787.