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INFOCOM
1999
IEEE

Inference of Multicast Routing Trees and Bottleneck Bandwidths Using End-to-end Measurements

13 years 8 months ago
Inference of Multicast Routing Trees and Bottleneck Bandwidths Using End-to-end Measurements
Abstract-- The efficacy of end-to-end multicast transport protocols depends critically upon their ability to scale efficiently to a large number of receivers. Several research multicast protocols attempt to achieve this high scalability by identifying sets of co-located receivers in order to enhance loss recovery, congestion control and so forth. A number of these schemes could be enhanced and simplified by some level of explicit knowledge of the topology of the multicast distribution tree, the value of the bottleneck bandwidth along the path between the source and each individual receiver and the approximate location of the bottlenecks in the tree. In this paper, we explore the problem of inferring the internal structure of a multicast distribution tree using only observations made at the end hosts. By noting correlations of loss patterns across the receiver set and by measuring how the network perturbs the fine-grained timing structure of the packets sent from the source, we can dete...
Sylvia Ratnasamy, Steven McCanne
Added 03 Aug 2010
Updated 03 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1999
Where INFOCOM
Authors Sylvia Ratnasamy, Steven McCanne
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