Results 261 to 270 of about 280,710 (308)

RaQ: A robust active queue management scheme based on rate and queue length

open access: yesComputer Communications, 2007
This paper introduces a new Active Queue Management (AQM) scheme, which is both rate-based and queue-based called RaQ and presents its design details.
Jinsheng Sun, Moshe Zukerman
exaly   +2 more sources

An optimal active queue management controller

2004 IEEE International Conference on Communications (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37577), 2004
This paper introduces a novel AQM optimal controller. The synthesis of the controller uses a non-rational approach, in which stability and performance objectives of the system are completely expressed as linear matrix inequalities (LMIs). The controller stabilizes the system under diverse network conditions.
Michele M. de A. EspĂ­ndula Lima   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Active Sense Queue Management (ASQM)

2015 IFIP Networking Conference (IFIP Networking), 2015
Active Queue Management (AQM) algorithms have seen a lot of attention in recent academic literature as well as in the popular press. The problem with traditional AQM is that it is designed to operate on queues at the IP layer. However, the problem popularly called bufferbloat can move about among many queues some of which are resistant to traditional ...
Daniel M. Havey, Kevin C. Almeroth
openaire   +1 more source

Deep-Reinforcement-Learning-Based Age-of-Information-Aware Low-Power Active Queue Management for IoT Sensor Networks

IEEE Internet of Things Journal
As the number of Internet of Things (IoT) sensors increases and their deployment becomes denser, power management for IoT sensor networks becomes more important.
Tae-hoon Song, Yeunwoong Kyung
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Auto-tuning active queue management

2017 9th International Conference on Communication Systems and Networks (COMSNETS), 2017
Active queue management (AQM) algorithms preemptively drop packets to prevent unnecessary delays through a network while keeping utilization high. Many AQM ideas have been proposed, but none have been widely adopted because these rely on pre-specification or pre-tuning of parameters and thresholds that do not necessarily adapt to dynamic network ...
Joe H. Novak, Sneha Kumar Kasera
openaire   +1 more source

Machine Learning Approaches for Active Queue Management: A Survey, Taxonomy, and Future Directions

Comput. Networks
Active Queue Management (AQM), a network-layer congestion control technique endorsed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), encourages routers to discard packets before the occurrence of buffer overflow.
Mohammad Parsa Toopchinezhad   +1 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Analysis of sfqCoDel for Active Queue Management

The Fifth International Conference on the Applications of Digital Information and Web Technologies (ICADIWT 2014), 2014
The availability of cheaper and high capacity Random Access Memory (RAM) has resulted in the growth of buffer size in all the computing devices. This aberrant increase of buffer capacity in network devices has resulted into high latency, leading to reduced throughput; thus decreasing the tendency of absorbing spontaneous burst of traffic.
V. Preethi Rao   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Active Queue Management in RED Considering Critical Point on Target Queue

Journal of Interconnection Networks, 2021
The basic philosophy behind RED is to prevent congestion. When the average queue length exceeds the minimum threshold, packets are randomly dropped, or the explicit congestion notification bit is marked. Since network requirements differ significantly, it is not an optimal approach to establish RED parameters with constant value.
Soamdeep Singha   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

On active queue management in cellular networks

2017 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops (INFOCOM WKSHPS), 2017
Active queue management (AQM) is broadly accepted as the tool of choice for tackling bufferbloat (the accumulation of large queueing delays) in network buffers. CoDel and PIE are considered two of the most promising AQM schemes, but little has been done to adopt them in cellular networks, which are particularly plagued by bufferbloat.
Joseph D. Beshay   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

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