Sciweavers

CCR
2007

Dynamic load balancing without packet reordering

13 years 4 months ago
Dynamic load balancing without packet reordering
Dynamic load balancing is a popular recent technique that protects ISP networks from sudden congestion caused by load spikes or link failures. Dynamic load balancing protocols, however, require schemes for splitting traffic across multiple paths at a fine granularity. Current splitting schemes present a tussle between slicing granularity and packet reordering. Splitting traffic at the granularity of packets quickly and accurately assigns the desired traffic share to each path, but can reorder packets within a TCP flow, confusing TCP congestion control. Splitting traffic at the granularity of a flow avoids packet reordering but may overshoot the desired shares by up to 60% in dynamic environments, resulting in low end-to-end network goodput. Contrary to popular belief, we show that one can systematically split a single flow across multiple paths without causing packet reordering. We propose FLARE, a new traffic splitting algorithm that operates on bursts of packets, carefully chos...
Srikanth Kandula, Dina Katabi, Shantanu Sinha, Art
Added 12 Dec 2010
Updated 12 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2007
Where CCR
Authors Srikanth Kandula, Dina Katabi, Shantanu Sinha, Arthur Berger
Comments (0)