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This book answers a question which came about while the author was
work ing on his diploma thesis [1]: would it be better to ask for
the available band width instead of probing the network (like TCP
does)? The diploma thesis was concerned with long-distance musical
interaction ("NetMusic"). This is a very peculiar application: only
a small amount of bandwidth may be necessary, but timely delivery
and reduced loss are very important. Back then, these require ments
led to a thorough investigation of existing telecommunication
network mechanisms, but a satisfactory answer to the question could
not be found. Simply put, the answer is "yes" - this work describes
a mechanism which indeed enables an application to "ask for the
available bandwidth". This obvi ously does not only concern online
musical collaboration any longer. Among others, the mechanism
yields the following advantages over existing alterna tives: * good
throughput while maintaining close to zero loss and a small
bottleneck queue length * usefulness for streaming media
applications due to a very smooth rate * feasibility for satellite
and wireless links * high scalability Additionally, a reusable
framework for future applications that need to "ask the network"
for certain performance data was developed.
This book answers a question which came about while the author was
work ing on his diploma thesis [1]: would it be better to ask for
the available band width instead of probing the network (like TCP
does)? The diploma thesis was concerned with long-distance musical
interaction ("NetMusic"). This is a very peculiar application: only
a small amount of bandwidth may be necessary, but timely delivery
and reduced loss are very important. Back then, these require ments
led to a thorough investigation of existing telecommunication
network mechanisms, but a satisfactory answer to the question could
not be found. Simply put, the answer is "yes" - this work describes
a mechanism which indeed enables an application to "ask for the
available bandwidth". This obvi ously does not only concern online
musical collaboration any longer. Among others, the mechanism
yields the following advantages over existing alterna tives: * good
throughput while maintaining close to zero loss and a small
bottleneck queue length * usefulness for streaming media
applications due to a very smooth rate * feasibility for satellite
and wireless links * high scalability Additionally, a reusable
framework for future applications that need to "ask the network"
for certain performance data was developed.
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