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CN
2004

The effect of bandwidth and buffer pricing on resource allocation and QoS

13 years 4 months ago
The effect of bandwidth and buffer pricing on resource allocation and QoS
Congestion-based pricing of network resources is a common approach in evolving network architectures that support Quality of Service (QoS). Resource usage and QoS will thus fluctuate in response to changes in price, which must be dynamically controlled through feedback. Such feedback algorithms typically assume that network resources behave as Normal goods, i.e., that an increase in the price of a resource results in a decreased demand for that resource. Here, we investigate the sensitivity of resource allocation and the resulting QoS to resource prices in a reservation-based QoS architecture that provides guaranteed bounds on packet loss and end-to-end delay for real-time applications. We derive necessary and sufficient conditions for bandwidth and buffer to act as Normal goods, showing that this depends on the shapes of the utility and QoS functions. We then show that the minimum total cost is a decreasing convex function of loss. When the delay constraints are absent or not binding...
Nan Jin, Scott Jordan
Added 16 Dec 2010
Updated 16 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2004
Where CN
Authors Nan Jin, Scott Jordan
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